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NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

‘Girl, Interrupted,' With Aimee Mann Songs, to Be Staged in New York
The Public Theater will present the play, which Martyna Majok adapted from the best-selling memoir.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

In Kim Kardashian's New Legal Drama ‘All's Fair,' the Power Suits Do the Heavy Lifting
"All's Fair," a new legal drama from Ryan Murphy, flips the idea of a corporate uniform on its head.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

Juliana May Brings the Audacity of Optimism to BAM Fisher
For her new work, opening at BAM Fisher, Juliana F. May looks to early influences to create her version of a postmodern musical.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

3 Plays About Jewish Identity That Resist Easy Answers
The Off Broadway shows "Hannah Senesh," "Jewish Plot" and "Playing Shylock" take stock of discussions around casting and storytelling.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

Harry Potter and the Souped-Up Audiobooks
The reimagined series from Audible features a voice cast of more than 200 actors, a 60-piece orchestra and an immersive soundscape.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

In ‘Figure,' Dancing in Costumes that Don't Want to Dance
A fashion designer and a choreographer created a work in which intentionally cumbersome garments lead and the dancers' movements follow.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

In ‘Wicked: For Good,' Ariana Grande Solidifies Herself as a Dramatic Actress
The pop superstar reinvented herself in the first "Wicked," but the sequel shows just how much further she can go as an actress.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

In ‘Death by Lightning,' Matthew Macfadyen and Michael Shannon Make Sparks Fly
In a joint interview, the actors discussed presidential politics, period facial hair and why "the United States of America needs therapy."

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

Music to Mourn Ukraine in World War II Returns With Fresh Urgency
Thomas de Hartmann's Violin Concerto was long neglected but is now being championed by Joshua Bell, while Ukraine is once again under attack.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

The Love Poem Andrea Gibson Wrote for Their Widow...and for You
Andrea Gibson and Megan Falley were two poets in love. After Gibson's death, Falley is figuring out what that love looks like now.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

Sam McKinniss Paints the 2020s
Now on display at a Manhattan gallery, his internet-sourced portraits are in demand. But he says, "I'm a very nervous person."

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

Tessa Thompson and Nina Chanel Abney on the Uses of Delusion
The "Hedda" actress and the artist chat about balancing art with commerce and the politicization of a Black queer figure.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

How All Those Star-Studded ‘Knives Out' Casts Were Assembled
For the original, Daniel Craig was hired weeks, not months, in advance, and Ana De Armas joined days ahead. The latest, "Wake Up Dead Man," followed that template.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

Can't Get Enough of the Louvre Heist? Try These Fantasy Books
The best-selling fantasy writer Holly Black recommends novels that blend the thrills of a well-executed crime with intrigue and sorcery.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 05, 2025

Late Night Chuckles at Andrew Cuomo's Last-Minute Cheering Section
Republicans like President Trump, Stephen Miller and Elon Musk endorsed him ahead of New York City's mayoral election. Stephen Colbert referred to them as "everyone New Yorkers love."

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

Polarizing San Francisco Fountain Will Be Dismantled
"From a city that is supposed to be avant-garde, it's a shame," the sculpture's 96-year-old artist said after the decision.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

Director of Philadelphia Art Museum Is Dismissed After Unpopular Rebranding
Sasha Suda was three years into her five-year contract when the museum's board announced that she was being terminated for cause.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

Norman Rockwell's Family Condemns Homeland Security's Use of His Work
In a series of social media posts, the department used the artist's paintings to promote the Trump administration's anti-immigration agenda.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

Sara Terry, Photographer Who Captured War's Aftermath, Dies at 70
Her haunting work focused on the lingering traces of conflict in places like Bosnia and Sierra Leone, after the firing had stopped.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

Meet the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Inductees
Listen to songs from Cyndi Lauper, Outkast, Soundgarden and more ahead of the ceremony on Saturday night in Los Angeles.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

The Joyce Theater to Receive $15 Million Gift
The money, from the late Anupam Puri and Rajika Puri, will help the dance-dedicated theater in a time of uncertainty for organizations in the field.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

‘Messy White Gays' Review: A Satire We've Seen Before
Drew Droege's newest play Off Broadway is a lot like his others, skewering the entitlement of wealthy, oblivious gay men in Manhattan.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

How the Cop Show ‘Barney Miller' Made Gay TV History, 50 Years Ago
A 1975 episode introduced audiences to one of the first openly gay couples in mainstream American television not depicted as deviants or criminals.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

In ‘Kyoto,' Seeking to Save the Earth but Veering Off Course
At Lincoln Center Theater, a new play from the makers of "The Jungle" tries to dramatize the negotiations that led to the Kyoto Protocol.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

American Ballet Theater Tries to Make the Past Feel Fresh
This fall the offerings at American Ballet Theater, now in its 85th year, included a tepid premiere and touching debuts in Agnes de Mille's "Rodeo."

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

What Is the Right Way to Say Godot?
The latest starry revival of Samuel Beckett's play is on Broadway, and one thing is certain: Whatever you call its elusive character, he doesn't come.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

Flowers That Are Never Out of Season
How one decades-old Milan shop makes remarkably realistic blossoms out of copper.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 04, 2025

Late Night Finds Trump's Rich ‘Great Gatsby' Party in Poor Taste
"There were dancers, costumes and champagne — a wonderful celebration where the theme was apparently gross income inequality," Jon Stewart said.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

In ‘Kyoto,' Seeking Consensus to Save the Earth but Veering Off Course
At Lincoln Center Theater, a new play from the makers of "The Jungle" tries to dramatize the negotiations that led to the Kyoto Protocol.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

Stream These Diane Ladd-Laura Dern Collaborations
Ladd, who died on Monday, had several memorable screen roles alongside her daughter, Dern. Below are highlights.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

Diane Ladd, Oscar-Nominated Actress and Mother of Laura Dern, Dies at 89
She was a three-time Oscar contender playing strikingly different characters, in one case starring alongside her daughter and fellow nominee, Laura Dern.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

Review: Ratmansky's Astonishing ‘Fugue' Finds a Home in Denmark
Dedicated to Ukraine, Alexei Ratmansky's evening-length ballet "The Art of the Fugue" is both dispassionately unsentimental and profoundly moving.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

The Best Movies and TV Shows Coming to Netflix in November
The newest horror film from Guillermo del Toro and the final season of "Stranger Things" are among the highlights for U.S. subscribers.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

Donna Jean Godchaux-MacKay, Grateful Dead Singer, Dies at 78
She helped shape the band's sound in the 1970s, a decade that took the band to new heights.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

Climate Activist Who Vandalized Degas Case Sentenced to 18 Months in Prison
In a high-profile act of eco-activism, Tim Martin and a partner had smeared black and red paint on the case at the National Gallery of Art in 2023.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

How Does SML Make Experimental Jazz Albums? Very Unconventionally.
The Los Angeles quintet was born onstage, and that's exactly how it records LPs: by capturing live performances and twisting them, sometimes beyond recognition.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

La Scala Stages New Vision of Shostakovich's Original ‘Lady MacBeth'
Banned for decades in the Soviet Union for its dissonance and bawdiness, the opera returns as La Scala's season opener amid the 50th anniversary of Shostakovich's death.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

Romeo Castellucci Takes on Debussy for His La Scala Debut
The Italian director Romeo Castellucci, known for his avant-garde theater productions, will take on Debussy's "Pelléas et Mélisande" in his La Scala debut.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

La Scala's First ‘Ring' in a Decade Passes the Wagnerian Flame
Two conductors — a mentor and a protégé, both trained as pianists — bring precision and lyricism to the first new staging of Wagner's epic in a decade.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

Mthuthuzeli November's ‘Pinch Me' Moment at the Paris Opera Ballet
Mthuthuzeli November was determined to get out of his impoverished home town. Now has his work alongside George Balanchine at the Paris Opera Ballet.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

A Public Art Rocket Ship Lands in Manhattan
"The Mothership Connection" grew out of the artist Zak Ové's fascination with "how masquerade had become a space for pivotally working towards Trinidad's independence."

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

‘Romy & Michele: The Musical' Review: Just Following the Script
This movie adaptation has a couple of laughs, but could have been better served by expanding its reach.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

What Ever Happened to Greer Lankton?
Nearly 30 years after her death, the artist's freakish and fashionable doll sculptures are finally getting their due. But those who knew her best are still grappling with her legacy.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

Has Theater Become Everybody's Church?
New shows by Jen Tullock, Jordan E. Cooper and others have a common theme: You can walk away from the church, but the songs stay with you.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

Inspired by Rome's Pantheon: Antony Gormley and Tadao Ando's Art Cave
The British sculptor Antony Gormley and the Japanese architect Tadao Ando designed an installation evoking the ancient Roman dome. Building it was complicated.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 03, 2025

‘All's Fair,' Plus 7 Things to Watch on TV This Week
Ryan Murphy's new show airs on Hulu and two mockumentaries have their season premieres.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 02, 2025

Maria Riva, Dietrich Daughter Who Demystified the Legend, Dies at 100
She was her mother's handmaiden and aide-de-camp. In 1993, her blockbuster biography told of the awful price she paid.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 02, 2025

‘SNL' Holds NYC Mayoral Debate Featuring Trump in Cold Open
Andrew Cuomo (Miles Teller, the host), duked it out with Zohran Mamdani (Ramy Youssef) and Curtis Sliwa (Shane Gillis). George Santos was back with a confession.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 02, 2025

‘S.N.L.' Holds Its Own Debate of New York City Mayoral Hopefuls
Andrew Cuomo (Miles Teller, the host), duked it out with Zohran Mamdani (Ramy Youssef) and Curtis Sliwa (Shane Gillis). George Santos was back with a confession.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 02, 2025

The Reason We Can't Look Away From ‘A House of Dynamite'
The ticking-clock threat of an imminent missile strike makes for propulsive viewing. It's long been a go-to setup in Hollywood, from "Dr. Strangelove" on.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 02, 2025

The Game She Wrote on a Boat Kept Her Afloat
By sharing details of her seafaring life, a young designer found an audience for her cozy game about cleaning polluted waterways.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 01, 2025

Marcyliena Morgan, Founder of Harvard's Hip-Hop Archive, Dies at 75
Her university's vast collection of albums, scholarly essays and other ephemera helped establish rap as a course of serious study on a par with classical music.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 01, 2025

The Poster Designers Who Helped Bring Movies to Life
With their posters for the Indiana Jones films, Rambo and more, Renato Casaro and Drew Struzan made work that embedded itself in our pop culture memories.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 01, 2025

Itzhak Perlman Wasn't Sure About Doing ‘Schindler's List'
"I foolishly said that I'd think about if I wanted to do it," the violinist said. "And Toby, my wife, said, ‘Are you out of your mind? You're going to think about it?' So I called back."

NYTimes Arts
Nov 01, 2025

‘Hedda' Director Nia DaCosta on Her Sumptuous Adaptation of Ibsen
The director's sumptuous rethinking of "Hedda Gabler" raises questions about women, freedom and the choices we make about our lives.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 01, 2025

The Best Movies and TV Shows Coming to Disney , Amazon, HBO Max, Peacock and More in November
"Bat-Fam," "The Beatles Anthology," "Pluribus," "Eddington" and "I Love L.A." arrive, and "Landman" returns.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 01, 2025

15 Off Broadway Shows to Catch in November
Tom Hanks returns to New York theater alongside Kelli O'Hara, and Ariana DeBose leads "The Baker's Wife," a cult musical.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 01, 2025

28 Fun Things to Do in NYC in November 2025
Sure, Tom Turkey looms large this month, but other highlights include a magic show with Muppets, Patti Smith and "Horses," and wrestling drag queens.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 01, 2025

Nine Inch Nails Are Filling the Hole in Their Souls With Film Music
Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross's soundtrack for "Tron: Ares" is their first under their acclaimed band's name. These days, the project "feels vital and exciting again."

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

Zoë Wicomb, Acclaimed South African Author, Dies at 76
In novels and short stories, she delivered sharp observations of the constraints and contradictions of apartheid and its aftermath.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

Alison Knowles, Artist Who Took Lunch to New Levels, Dies at 92
An early participant in the eccentric collection of artists known as Fluxus, she was perhaps best known for pieces centered on a humble tuna sandwich and a giant salad.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

‘It: Welcome to Derry' Season 1, Episode 2 Recap: It Takes a Village
Unsettling things happen and the town grown-ups hardly seem to notice. Lilly and Ronnie receive unsettling visits from their pasts.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

Kelvin LaVerne, Creator of Enigmatic Furnishings, Dies at 88
With his father, Philip, he made idiosyncratic, often monumental bronze work influenced by ancient themes. But was it art or was it furniture?

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

After ‘S.N.L.,' Tim Meadows Found Success as a Second Fiddle
Twenty-five years after he left "Saturday Night Live," he is still reaching new audiences, most recently with a new CBS sitcom and a role in the DC Comics universe.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

Five Action Movies to Stream Now
This month's picks include convicted swordsmen, crooked cops and bumbling heroes who can't feel pain.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

Watch a Tense Scene From ‘A House of Dynamite'
The film's director, Kathryn Bigelow, narrates a heightened sequence in which a nuclear missile is headed for the United States.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

‘A House of Dynamite' | Anatomy of a Scene
The director Kathryn Bigelow narrates a tense sequence from her film, in which a ballistic missile is headed for the United States.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

The Golden Toilet Returns as a Sotheby's Headliner, for $10 Million
The flushable sculpture, "America," was made by Maurizio Cattelan, the artist whose banana taped to the wall sold for $6.2 million last year.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

Kim Kardashian Calls 1969 Moon Landing Fake. NASA Sets the Record Straight.
NASA's chief, Sean Duffy, set the record straight after Kim Kardashian repeated the conspiracy theory that the 1969 moon landing had been faked.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

Stephen Prina Taught a Class on Keanu Reeves in 1994. What Does He Think of ‘Godot'?
Stephen Prina may have been one of the first to see a deeper pattern in Mr. Reeves's work.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

7 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
Oct 31, 2025

A Haunted Tour of the Met Museum
Zachary Small, culture reporter, takes us on a tour of his four favorite spooky artworks at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. You're in for a scare: they include a decapitation platter and a sculpture of a rumored cannibal.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

‘Frankenstein' Has Always Held Up a Mirror. What Does It Show Us Now?
In Guillermo del Toro's new version, the answer lies in how deeply it explores the relationship between creator and created.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

‘I Love L.A.' Depicts the Ecstasy and Agony of Influencing
The HBO comedy includes TV's most layered portrait of a social media influencer, the latest evolution in a character type that reflects broader feelings about internet culture.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

‘The White House Effect' and the Value of Letting Footage Speak for Itself
This film uses archival clips and documents to examine the way climate change evolved from nonpartisan topic to divisive issue.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

Arcade Franchises From the '80s Are Back to Punish Players
Ninja Gaiden, Shinobi and Double Dragon revivals are reminders that the definition of a difficult video game has changed.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

For Podcasters, a Voice Clone Is a Double-Edged Sword
Are A.I. replicas a boon for productivity or a betrayal of the bond with listeners?

NYTimes Arts
Oct 31, 2025

Jimmy Kimmel Can't Believe He Agrees With Marjorie Taylor Greene
"Sometimes you go so far right you come out on the other side," Kimmel said of the congresswoman, who has clashed with fellow Republicans over health care.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Enslaved Potter's Art, Displayed at Boston Museum, Returns to Heirs at Last
The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, said David Drake, the artist, had been "deprived of his creations involuntarily and without compensation."

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Laurie Metcalf Is Riveting in ‘Little Bear Ridge Road'
The playwright Samuel D. Hunter makes his Broadway debut with an addition to his Idaho oeuvre, set during the Covid-19 pandemic and its aftermath.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

‘Bat Boy: The Musical' Review: He's Just Trying to Fit In
For its gala, New York City Center revives an antic show about a half-man tabloid sensation, with catchy music and lyrics by the versatile Laurence O'Keefe.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Sean ‘Diddy' Combs Transferred to Federal Prison in New Jersey
The music mogul was sentenced earlier this month to 50 months in prison for two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Art Gallery Shows to See in November
This week in Newly Reviewed, Jillian Steinhauer covers E.E. Ikeler's cosmic diagrams, Veronica Ryan's resolute casualness, Tega Brain and Sam Lavigne's climate change interventions.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Ted Huffman to Lead Aix-en-Provence Opera Festival
The Aix-en-Provence Festival in France has named Huffman to succeed the visionary Pierre Audi, who died earlier this year.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Thieves Steal More Than 1,000 Items From Oakland Museum of California
A robbery this month targeted Indigenous baskets, jewelry and other artifacts from a storage facility of the Oakland Museum of California.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Pierre Robert, Philadelphia's ‘Citizen' D.J., Dies at 70
He became a stalwart of Philadelphia's rock airwaves after moving from California, broadcasting a live show for more than 40 years.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Review: To Cure the Sick, ‘Le Grand Bal' Prescribes a Rave
The French troupe Compagnie Dyptik is making its United States debut with a show seemingly inspired by pandemic isolation and its aftermath.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

French Police Arrest 5 More in Louvre Jewel Heist Investigation
The authorities have detained seven suspects in total, but have not recovered the stolen jewels.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

‘Paddington: The Musical': The West End Will Now Look After This Bear
Over nearly seven decades Paddington Bear has enjoyed a lasting popularity. Now, he's the star of a new musical.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Surreal Creatures Gather at Michigan's Cranbrook Art Museum
Plus: a new book from Chantal Joffe and Olivia Laing, satin flats for holiday parties and more recommendations from T Magazine.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Three Great Documentaries to Stream
In this month's picks, a chilling true-crime entry, a movie about an execution equipment manufacturer and a devilish doc from the "Exorcist" director William Friedkin.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Monet Was Reluctant. Venice Seduced Him.
Even on vacation, the father of French impressionism couldn't resist the pull of optics and art history. A lush blockbuster show in Brooklyn helps you see why.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Harlem's Remarkable New Studio Museum Redefines 125th Street
After seven years and $160 million, the museum has an uplifting home on a street that has always been a barometer of Harlem's fortunes and aspirations.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

‘Down Cemetery Road' Review: Warming Up for ‘Slow Horses'
Emma Thompson plays the private-eye heroine of Mick Herron's first series of novels in a new series for Apple TV.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Rosalía's Thrilling Pop Evolution on ‘Lux': Singing in 13 Languages
The Spanish musician on why (and how) she pushed herself to make "Lux," a labor of love exploring the feminine divine and the brutalities of romance.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

Tim Meadows Just Wants to Keep Showing Up to Be Funny
Twenty-five years after he left "S.N.L.," he is still finding new audiences, most recently with a new CBS sitcom and a role in the DC Comics universe.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

B. Wurtz's Life in Five Artworks
B. Wurtz uses humble, everyday materials — plastic bags, aluminum pans — and turns them into something beautiful. Here, his life in five artworks.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

‘Baahubali: The Epic' Review: The Return of the King
This film combines S.S. Rajamouli's dynamic two-part period epic, "Baahubali: The Beginning" (2015) and "Baahubali 2: The Conclusion" (2017), into a single, rollicking story with aplomb.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

‘Little Amélie or the Character of Rain' Review: Discovering the World
In this sweet animated film, set in Japan, a Belgian child encounters a flood of new wonders.

NYTimes Arts
Oct 30, 2025

‘Fire of Wind' Review: May Day
In this elegant, elliptical folk tale set in rural Portugal, a group of grape pickers are trapped in treetops after a bull is let loose and gores a few of their companions.

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