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NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

Slava Tsukerman, Who Directed the Cult Classic ‘Liquid Sky,' Dies at 86
A Russian-born director, he created a film about New Wave models and killer aliens in 1980s New York, helping to reshape independent filmmaking in America.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

At the National Archives, the Declaration Gets More Company
The Emancipation Proclamation and the 19th Amendment have been added to the Archives's rotunda, the first permanent changes there in nearly 75 years.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

Melvin Edwards, Sculptor Who Wove Black History Into Art, Dies at 88
Lynch Fragments, a series of abstract steel sculptures he created starting in 1963, evoked the long, devastating history of violence against Black Americans.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie' Review: It's-a Meh
The sequel to the mega-blockbuster can't hold still long enough to let us enjoy the good stuff.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

10 Synth-Pop Songs That Bring the Drama
With TV soundtracks increasingly turning to nostalgic '80s tracks, hear a playlist of essential hits and deeper cuts.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

The Next British Invasion Is Here, and It's Led by Women
Raye, Olivia Dean, Lola Young and PinkPantheress are making a big impact on the charts and in pop culture, foregrounding their Englishness rather than adapting it.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

Eurovision Song Contest to Add Asian Edition This Year
The competition will bring together singers representing 10 nations including South Korea, the Philippines and Vietnam.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

Renoir, Cézanne and Matisse Artworks Are Stolen in 3-Minute Museum Heist, Police Say
Thieves broke into the Magnani-Rocca Foundation outside Parma, Italy, officials said, and made off with pieces worth millions.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

Three Great Documentaries to Stream
In this month's picks, reflections on a comedian couple, a charged reality-TV series and activism in Northern Ireland.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

International Booker Prize Shortlist: 6 Novels With ‘Burning Humanity'
Books by Marie NDiaye, Daniel Kehlmann and Rene Karabash are among the shortlisted titles for the major award for fiction translated into English.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

How Instagram's ‘PG-13' Branding for Teens Unraveled
The social media giant, under legal pressure from the Motion Picture Association, has retreated from its use of the movie rating in its marketing.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

‘The Book of Mormon' Is Sorry if You Have Been Offended for 15 Years
The taboo-busting, gasp-inducing Broadway musical comedy has been a hit with audiences and critics. But could it be produced today?

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

‘The Book of Mormon' Is Sorry if You Were Offended for 15 Years
The taboo-busting, gasp-inducing Broadway musical comedy has been a hit with audiences and critics. But could it be produced today?

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

Morton Feldman Was Loud. His Music Was Quietly Haunting.
Feldman, born a century ago this year, wrote quietly sensual and humanist works in an age of structural rigor.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2026

Stephen Colbert Marvels at ‘No Kings' Rallies Worldwide
"Just look at the crowd we got here in New York," he said. "Oop, that's the T.S.A. line at J.F.K."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

‘Dog Day Afternoon' on Broadway, With Jon Bernthal and Ebon Moss-Bachrach, Is Underbaked
A raucous adaptation of a gritty portrait of New York stifles tension with comedy, leaving its stars, Jon Bernthal and Ebon Moss-Bachrach, adrift.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

Ben Stevenson Dies at 89; Choreographer Made Houston Ballet Thrive
He created dances performed around the world, and under his leadership the Houston company grew into one of America's largest and most prominent.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

Mary Beth Hurt, Actress Acclaimed in ‘Interiors' and ‘Garp,' Dies at 79
She elevated supporting roles in films with insight and improvisational skill, a talent she took to Broadway as well, earning Tony nominations.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

Celine Dion Announces Comeback Concerts in Paris
Dion, who has rarely performed since announcing her stiff person syndrome diagnosis in 2022, will put on 10 shows beginning in September.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

Agosto Machado Is Dead; Artist Memorialized New York's Avant-Garde
An experimental theater veteran, he collected the ephemera of his friends and colleagues. As they began to die, he made shrines honoring them.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

Mark Morris's Stations of the Cross: Simple and Stinging
One of two New York premieres at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, "Via Dolorosa" seeks truth in plainness.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

Renoir, Cézanne and Matisse Paintings Are Stolen in 3-Minute Museum Heist, Police Say
Thieves broke into the Magnani-Rocca Foundation outside Parma, Italy, officials said, and made off with paintings worth millions.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

For a High Priestess of Extreme Theater, Death Is Gentler Than Life
In her "Trilogy of Funerals," the Spanish provocateur Angélica Liddell shows a sense of vulnerability that will surprise longtime watchers of her work.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

‘Death of a Salesman' on Broadway Has Help From Something Old
Joe Mantello's Broadway revival, starring Nathan Lane and Laurie Metcalf, was inspired by a draft with notes by Arthur Miller. Here are some of them.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

Symphony Space to Undergo a $45 Million Makeover
The Upper West Side performing arts venue will take its programming across the city while its doors close for a 15-month overhaul.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

In Her Broadway Debut, Mariska Hargitay Will Replace Daniel Radcliffe in ‘Every Brilliant Thing'
Starting in May, Hargitay will make her Broadway debut in "Every Brilliant Thing," an elastic play that shape shifts to fit a distinctly different star.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

How Dancers Are Helping Scientists Rethink Bodies Without Gravity
As a new commercial era of space exploration accelerates, scientists are considering the physical culture of outer space. Dancers are well positioned to help.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

Sarah Shahi Plays a Therapist on ‘Paradise' and Nearly Everywhere Else
The actress has gotten used to dispensing advice, including on this Hulu drama and in a new self-help memoir.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

In a New Memoir, Arsenio Hall Recalls His High-Flying Years as a Talk-Show Host
Eddie Murphy, Snoop Dogg and Bill Clinton (naturally) show up in his gossipy new memoir. He isn't very sentimental.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

29 New Books to Read in April: Emma Straub, Patrick Radden Keefe, TJ Klune and More
Novels by Emma Straub, Ben Lerner and TJ Klune; nonfiction by Patrick Radden Keefe and Lena Dunham; a road trip history of the United States; and more.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

With Mario and Minecraft, Hollywood Courts Gamers
Super Mario Bros. and Minecraft became movie blockbusters, and Call of Duty and Legend of Zelda adaptations are on the way. Fans of the video games are watching closely.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2026

‘The Real Housewives of Rhode Island,' Plus 7 Things to Watch on TV This Week
A new iteration of the Bravo franchise begins and the second season of "Your Friends & Neighbors" premieres.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2026

‘The Comeback' Season 3, Episode 2: Getting the Band Back Together
Valerie doesn't fully understand why people in Hollywood are so worked up about A.I. She just sees a wave she thinks she knows how to ride.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2026

Eric Overmyer, Who Wrote for Modern Television Classics, Dies at 74
Trained as a playwright, he got his first TV writing job on "St. Elsewhere," then worked on "Homicide: Life on the Street," "The Wire," "Treme" and "Bosch."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2026

How a Mistake Made ‘Project Hail Mary's' Rocky Into a Breakout Star
Rocky was brought to life through a combination of puppetry and visual effects. But his charming personality was the result of a misunderstanding.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2026

‘The Wild Party' Is a Vivacious Play That Started as a Scandalous Poem
One hundred years after it was banned for its depiction of hedonism, the rhythmic, jazz-soaked poetry of Joseph Moncure March continues to find new life.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2026

‘Life! Life! Life!': Reviving a Globe-Trotting Sculptor of the Gilded Age
Paul Troubetzkoy traveled the world to immortalize the A-listers of his time. An exhibition in Milan remembers his vitality and fame.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2026

Taylor Frankie Paul's Past Was No Secret. A Child's Cry Changed Everything.
Before being cast as "The Bachelorette," Taylor Frankie Paul had discussed — with police, on podcasts and on TV — the domestic dispute that involved her 5-year-old daughter.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2026

Yearning for Sun, New Yorkers Soak Up the Sauna
After a stretch of cold weather, the Culture of Bathe-ing Festival's waterfront gathering brought out the swimsuits and a different kind of chill.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2026

Paul McCartney, Robyn: 8 Songs We're Talking About This Week
Paul McCartney previews his first solo album in six years, and the Swedish pop star Robyn returns after eight with "Sexistential."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2026

Bruce Hornsby Isn't Playing It Safe on ‘Indigo Park'
Admired by a new generation including Bon Iver's Justin Vernon and Vampire Weekend's Ezra Koenig, his new album, "Indigo Park," keeps pushing forward.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2026

Thundercat Can Geek Out With the Best of Them
The genre-crossing bassist returning with his first album in six years broke down highlights from his collections of comic books, fashion and more.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2026

7 Podcasts to Boost Your Spirits
Shows from Amy Poehler, the novelist John Green and the Irish poet Pádraig Ó Tuama will help you take a break from the doomscrolling.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2026

Alexander Kluge, 94, Revolutionary Filmmaker in Postwar Germany, Dies
As a director, theorist and prolific author, he was one of his country's towering artists and public intellectuals.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2026

Jon Bernthal and Ebon Moss-Bachrach on Bringing ‘Dog Day Afternoon' to Broadway
Jon Bernthal and Ebon Moss-Bachrach are both making their Broadway debut in a high-stakes adaptation of the beloved 1975 film "Dog Day Afternoon."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Overlooked No More: Gertrude Chandler Warner, Author of ‘The Boxcar Children'
Her best-selling series, about four children who live in a train car and solve mysteries, inspired sequels, spinoffs and animated films.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Outside Kennedy Center, Jane Fonda and Joan Baez Raise Voices in Protest
The pair joined in a gathering of artists and others who denounced censorship and faulted President Trump's growing influence over the nation's cultural life.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

New York City Ballet Pulls Out of Kennedy Center Performances
The decision by the company, one of the most prestigious in the country, is the latest in a wave of high-profile cancellations at the center.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Alexander Kluge, a Lodestar in New German Cinema Movement, Dies at 94
A film director, movie theorist and author, he was widely regarded as one of his country's towering artists and intellectuals.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

The BTS Connection With Howard University
In promoting its new album, the K-pop superstars looked back to a late-19th-century moment featuring the unofficial anthem Arirang for inspiration.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Stream These Movies and Shows Before They Leave Netflix in April
Several Christopher Guest mockumentaries and almost every James Bond movie are among the titles leaving for U.S. subscribers before the month ends.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Coleman Barks, Who Popularized the Islamic Poet Rumi in the West, Dies at 88
Although he did not speak a word of Persian, his interpretations of the 13th-century mystic's work made Rumi a New Age icon for millions.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Five Horror Movies to Stream Now
This month brings paranoid psychopaths, ungodly subjugations and fiery suspicions.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

5 Takeaways From Netflix's ‘BTS: The Return' Documentary
Netflix's documentary about the superstar K-pop group's comeback after a four-year hiatus showcases its creative process, brotherhood and anxieties about fame.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

How ‘Love Story' Gave Viewers a History Lesson on the Kennedys and '90s NYC
The FX show, which dramatizes the relationship between John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette, has inspired a legion of younger viewers to dig into the couple's past and 1990s New York City.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Don't Let the Name Harry Hole Fool You. The Important One Is Jo Nesbo.
After a disappointing movie adaptation, the Norwegian author took the reins as showrunner in a new Netflix series based on his Detective Hole books.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

‘For All Mankind' Is the Anti-‘Black Mirror'
The optimistic space-race drama, starting its fifth season, imagines humans settling space without tech colonizing our minds.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

9 New Movies Our Critics Are Talking About This Week
Whether you're a casual moviegoer or an avid buff, our reviewers think these films are worth knowing about.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Can We Settle Your Music Debate? Of Course We Can.
Popcast is here to answer your questions. (And to tell you who's right.)

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

33 Fun Things to Do With Your Kids in NYC This Spring
They can shake off those winter doldrums by hunting for Easter eggs, running the bases at Brooklyn Cyclones' ballpark or gliding down Slide Hill on Governors Island.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Late Night Disses Trump's New ‘America First' Award
"How many fake trophies that were made specifically for him is this guy going to get?" Seth Meyers asked on Thursday's "Late Night."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Tracking Trump's Efforts to Reshape Cultural Institutions
Jennifer Schuessler, a culture reporter who writes about intellectual life, is now covering President Trump's attempts to amend the presentation of American history.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Chip Taylor, Writer of ‘Wild Thing' and Other Rock Hits, Dies at 86
The brother of the actor Jon Voight, he wrote songs for Frank Sinatra, Janis Joplin, Anne Murray and, with "Angel of the Morning," Juice Newton.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2026

Theater Tickets Are Cheaper in London Than New York. What Gives?
For half the price of a great seat at a Broadway show, you can see "Paddington" in the West End (if you can find a ticket) and snack on a marmalade sandwich.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

Salzburg Festival Fires Its Artistic Director
The board terminated Markus Hinterhäuser's contract early, leaving the leadership of the world's largest classical music festival in limbo for now.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘The Pitt' Season 2, Episode 12 Recap: Breaking Points
The stalwarts of the Pitt seem to be cracking under the stress of an especially difficult day — in a workplace defined by difficult days.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

Han Kang Among National Book Critics Circle Award Winners
This year's winners include the latest novel by the South Korean Nobel laureate in literature and a memoir by one of India's best known novelists.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

FKA twigs Says in Suit That Shia LaBeouf Had Her Sign ‘Illegal' NDA
The suit said the nondisclosure agreement that was part of her court settlement with Mr. LaBeouf, her former boyfriend, effectively silenced her. His lawyer disputes that.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

Sam Kieth, Creator of Surreal Comic Book Series The Maxx, Dies at 63
A cocreator of Neil Gaiman's Sandman series, he dreamed up a character who is homeless in the real world and a superhero in a subconscious realm. It was adapted for an MTV series.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘Tristan und Isolde' at the Met Opera Has a Troubling Problem
Audiences are packing the theater for a new "Tristan und Isolde." Everyone can see the same spectacle, but they probably don't hear the same sound.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

Robert Fox, Acclaimed Producer in Britain and on Broadway, Dies at 73
A favorite of actors like Maggie Smith, he produced dozens of plays, including "The Audience," about Queen Elizabeth II, which was made into the Netflix show "The Crown."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘Yes' Review: From Israel, an Uncomfortable Existential Howl
Nadav Lapid's scathing tone and accelerated rhythms lead this movie about a married couple who ingratiate themselves with the country's power elite.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

Dash Crofts, of the Soft-Rock Duo That Sang ‘Summer Breeze,' Dies at 87
Seals & Crofts had a number of Billboard Top 20 songs in the 1970s before their chart topper brought them global fame.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘Public Charge' Review: The World Is Messy. Being a Force for Good Is, Too.
A new play at the Public Theater written by Michael J. Chepiga and the former ambassador Julissa Reynoso is a diplomatic memoir of sorts, and a meditation on loving one's country.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘Teeth 'n' Smiles': A Pop Diva and a Flamed-Out Rock Music Revolution
The singer Self Esteem, aka Rebecca Lucy Taylor, is an incarnation of late 1960s counterculture in a new London production of David Hare's "Teeth ‘n' Smiles."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

The Kennedy Center Is Giving Bill Maher the Mark Twain Prize
The annual award that recognizes merit in humor is going to the satirist and talk show host who has been critical of President Trump and political correctness.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

Raphael and the Renaissance of Divine Beauty
This blockbuster exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art humanizes a lapsed god of painting.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

Paul Klee's "Angelus Novus" New York Debut On Hold Due to Mideast War
The rarely seen "Angelus Novus" by Paul Klee was supposed to arrive at New York's Jewish Museum, but remains in Israel instead.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

Rare Books Stolen From a Jesuit Archive in Rome Are Returned to Italy
The books, about astronomy and other topics, were written in Chinese by Jesuit missionaries who shared information on science as part of their effort to spread Christianity.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

What's Your Star Sign? The Ancients Could Offer You Some Insight.
Long before horoscope apps, the foundations of today's multibillion-dollar astrology industry were laid in Babylonia, Egypt and the classical world.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

A Storied Rockefeller Art Trove Goes on View at Asia Society
Our critic offers a guide to 70 years of great devotional sculptures in the Asia Society collection — including some that he once helped install.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

When a Not-So-Dark Knight and His Sidekick Saved a Wacky Gotham
Joel Schumacher apologized for "Batman & Robin," his corny 1997 superhero movie, but thanks to its ice puns and bat nipples, it's since become an accidental parody worth howling at.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

D. Boon's Death Shook Punk Rock. 40 Years Later, Minutemen Look Back.
The influential band's singer and guitarist died at 27, but the bassist Mike Watt and the drummer George Hurley never lost his spirit.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘They Will Kill You' Review: The Co-Op From Hell
Zazie Beetz fights her way through a high-rise of horrors in a splatter-fest that concentrates its creativity in its gore.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘She Dances' Review: Steve Zahn Is a Reluctant Chaperone
Zahn plays the father of Claire (his real-life daughter, Audrey), awkwardly accompanying her and a friend to a competition in Kentucky.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

Mearns and Melnick, Dance Stars Who Choose Each Other
In "Superbloom," the latest work by the ballet dancer Sara Mearns and the postmodern choreographer Jodi Melnick, women are at the forefront.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘Our Hero, Balthazar' Review: Lost Souls and Found Follies
Opposites attract in this provocative drama about mass violence and two disaffected man-boys.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘A Magnificent Life' Review: An Era of Artistic Revolutions
Sylvain Chomet ("The Triplets of Belleville"), directs this animated biopic of the filmmaker Marcel Pagnol, which revels in the sights and sounds of Provence.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘Forbidden Fruits' Review: Queen Bees of the Food Court
Among a group of high school girls at the mall, power becomes toxic in the style of modern classics like "Mean Girls" and "The Craft," but without the vibrancy.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘BTS: The Return' Review: Back in the Recording Booth
This documentary follows the K-pop supergroup BTS reuniting after a four-year hiatus as they find their album's new vision.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘Fantasy Life' Review: Digging Out of the Doldrums
Matthew Shear's comedic feature appealingly explores the jitters of a stalled young paralegal who babysits for a frustrated actress.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

‘Alpha' Review: Body Trouble
A reckless incident at a party throws a young girl's life into turmoil in this extraordinary third feature from Julia Ducournau.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

Marriage Might Not Happen. But ‘Something Very Bad' Did.
Executive produced by Matt and Ross Duffer, a new series by Haley Z. Boston finds horror in an idea that already terrifies her generation: romantic commitment.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

The Thailand Biennale Brings More to Phuket Than Mass Tourism
Contemporary artists from across Thailand and beyond honor the island's rich history of applied arts.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

In ‘The AI Doc,' Sam Altman and Dario Amodei Go on the Record
"The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist" tries to cover so much that it ends up being more confusing than clarifying, but parts are fascinating.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

8 Thriller Books About Housewives Getting Revenge
The author Elizabeth Arnott recommends thrilling tales of domestic vengeance and feminine power.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

For Baccarat, This Artist Created a Different Kind of Chandelier
Harry Nuriev has created a chandelier for Baccarat that swaps some of its famed crystal with everyday objects.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2026

Josh Johnson Ridicules the Army's Opening to Older Recruits
"Look, according to People magazine — and apparently the U.S. military — 42 is the new 35," Johnson said on Tuesday's "Daily Show."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 25, 2026

Chip Taylor, Writer of ‘Wild Thing' and Other Classic Rock Hits, Dies at 86
Mr. Taylor, the younger brother of the actor Jon Voight, found success as a songwriter for the likes of Janis Joplin and Juice Newton.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 25, 2026

Jury Awards Chance the Rapper $35 in Legal Fight With Former Manager
The former manager, Pat Corcoran, sued in 2020, seeking $3.8 million in unpaid royalties. Chance countersued for $1 million. The legal battle ended last week in what amounted to a draw.

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