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NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

‘Scary Movie' Review: Too Many Movies, Too Few Laughs
The sixth installment of this low-grade franchise takes a predictable and dismaying turn, even if it feels like the right time to bring the series back.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Art Gallery Shows to See in June
This week in Newly Reviewed, Will Heinrich files a dispatch from Los Angeles covering Charles Ray's strangely lifelike sculptures, James Harrison's flowers and a group show! (Exclamation point will make sense).

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Mister Rogers: Now on YouTube
On Thursday, Fred Rogers Productions started a channel dedicated to the beloved children's host. Eventually it will be a repository for full episodes, behind-the-scenes footage and compilations.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Kennedy Center Tells Staff to Immediately Remove Trump's Name From Documents
The center's general counsel also said that a federal judge's order meant the president's name must be taken off indoor and outdoor signage by June 12.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Amid Kennedy Center Strife, the National Symphony Faces a Cloudy Future
After months of uncertainty, and without an approved budget or secured venue, the orchestra has been unable to schedule its next season.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Wim Wenders Pulls Film With Teenage Nudity After Pleas by Nastassja Kinski
Nastassja Kinski was 13 years old when she was shown topless in the 1975 film "Wrong Move." "I could already tell that wasn't right," she told a German newspaper.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Saving Alice's Adventures in New York: Her Mural Traveled a Rabbit Hole Too
"Another Wonderland: Abram Champanier's Alice Mural" at the Museum of the City of New York brings together 16 panels of the only surviving W.P.A. mural from a hospital children's ward.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Limmie Pulliam, Tenor Who Overcame the Stigma of His Size, Dies at 50
He quit singing in his early 20s when opera companies objected to his appearance, but after a 12-year absence he revived his career to acclaim.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Pommelien Thijs, a Pop Star for Half a Country
Pommelien Thijs's catchy tunes are beloved in Belgium — in the Dutch-speaking part, at least.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Alan Gribben, Twain Scholar Who Excised Slur From ‘Huck Finn,' Dies at 84
He made it his mission to track down every book Mark Twain owned — and to fix what he saw as flaws that kept schools from teaching the author's most famous works.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

A Chance to Shop the Paris Opera's Jewel-Encrusted Closet
Vintage ball gowns, potbellied fat suits and diaphanous tunics were among the offerings when the Paris Opera held a public sale of opera and ballet costumes.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Where Sky Meets Water, Sanford Biggers Sees Life's ‘Drift'
In his first major solo survey on Long Island, the artist explores his connection to the East End's natural environment and culture in textile works, prints, sculptures and installations.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Nathan Lane and Laurie Metcalf on Their Tony-Nominated ‘Death of a Salesman'
The stars Nathan Lane and Laurie Metcalf talk with the show's director, Joe Mantello, about the exhilaration of collaborating and the trap of sentimentality.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

‘Underland' Review: Subterranean Adventurers
All over the world, voyagers are descending, legally and not, into the lower depths. This documentary offers a frustratingly abbreviated look at three of them.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

‘She's the He' Review: A Campy, Gender Swap Comedy
Nico Carney and Misha Osherovich play best friends on a mission to enter the women's locker room.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

‘Masters of the Universe' Review: Becoming a He-Man
The filmmakers behind this new live-action movie lean into the franchise's ridiculousness, with sometimes engaging results.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

‘The Little Sister' Review: Learning to Love
A French Algerian teenager grapples with her sexuality and her faith in a tender coming-of-age drama.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

‘Carolina Caroline' Review: Hearts on the Run
Samara Weaving and Kyle Gallner are magnetic in this lovers-on-the-lam joint awash in soulful sincerity.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

‘Jinsei' Review: Dreaming of J-Pop Stardom
In this anime film that follows a taciturn man over decades, the restrained animation is a saving grace.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Saving Alice's Adventures in New York. Her Mural Traveled a Rabbit Hole Too.
"Another Wonderland: Abram Champanier's Alice Mural" at the Museum of the City of New York brings together 16 panels of the only surviving W.P.A. mural from a hospital children's ward.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Review: In ‘Another World,' the Afterlife Glows Red
The director Tommy Ng Kai Chung turns reincarnation into a visually lush exploration of the human condition.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Why Do Most New Movies Look Meh?
Jessica M. Goldstein, an arts and culture reporter, inspects why movies today look different than they did 20 years ago.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

11 Books That Capture the Swoon-Worthy Drama of Wedding Season
These books dig into the thrilling, ugly and swoon-worthy drama of a happy couple's big day.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Kiyon Ross Wants Dancers at the School of American Ballet on the Edge of Danger
With "Proof of Life," Kiyon Ross wants to make his alma mater, the School of American Ballet, proud — and the dancers feel special. That's what he would have wanted.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 04, 2026

Late Night Reacts to Another Reality Star Wooing Voters
Michael Kosta wasn't impressed to see that the L.A. mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt "got a second-season pickup" after Tuesday's midterms.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

Pace Gallery Cuts 50 Artists and 50 Staff Amid Art Market Challenges
A challenging art market is forcing even an established player to contract.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

Ted Danson Apologizes for Blackface Roast of Whoopi Goldberg in 1993
The actor's monologue drew condemnation from figures including David N. Dinkins, New York's first Black mayor.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

The Good List: 6 Things to Bring Delight to Your Day
Questions for bats, Rothko weather and Knicks fever.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

‘The Fantasticks' and ‘Gloria' Will Head to Broadway This Season
The nonprofit Second Stage Theater said it would present a reimagined version of "The Fantasticks" and the Pulitzer finalist "Gloria" at the Helen Hayes Theater.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

John McClain, Who Helped Keep Michael Jackson's Profits Flowing, Dies at 72
A music executive with longstanding ties to the Jackson family, he worked to make Janet a star and Michael a posthumous commercial powerhouse.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

Caissie Levy, Tony Awards Contender and ‘Ragtime' Star, Is Having a Moment
Caissie Levy was Broadway's first Elsa. She starred in "Hair" and "Ghost." And now, for "Ragtime," she is an odds-on favorite to win a Tony Award.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

Artists Threaten to Sue Venice Biennale for Including Them in Awards
The artists want their names removed from a public vote to decide the best artist and pavilion, awards that are usually decided by a jury of experts.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

What's Next Now That Live Nation Has Been Found to Act as a Monopoly
The music industry may be significantly changed by the judicial rulings to come, but there is still a lot of lawyering left to do.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

I Tried to Have a Kid With My Best Friend. It Got Complicated.
Two queer friends dreamed of raising a child together. They almost made it real.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

Even on His Own, Nick Is Still a Jonas Brother
With a starring role in "Power Ballad" and ambitions across mediums, the 33-year-old is carving a singular path.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

At Interlochen, Where Jeffrey Epstein's Shadow Still Lingers
The arts school and camp is still contending with the fallout from its former ties to Mr. Epstein, an alumnus and donor accused of preying on two girls he met there.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

N.B.A. Finals Introduce Music by Nicholas Britell and Nas
The league is rolling out music by the composer Nicholas Britell and the rapper Nas that, if successful, could become the sport's sonic shorthand.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

5 Minutes That Will Make You Love Charlie Parker
Bird helped usher in bebop and transformed the alto saxophone into an instrument of startling possibility. Here's an 11-song primer on his enduring legacy.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

Making Scottish Ballet's ‘Mary, Queen of Scots' Legible to Americans
Scottish Ballet realized it needed to make its nation's history a bit more explicit to take its "Mary, Queen of Scots" on the road. It comes to Lincoln Center this week.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

A New Play, ‘Kenrex,' Revisits the Story of a Bully's Unsolved Murder
A man was shot dead surrounded by witnesses in Skidmore, Mo., but no one was ever prosecuted. Now that act of vigilante justice has inspired the play "Kenrex."

NYTimes Arts
Jun 03, 2026

Late Night Wants Trump to Give Peace Talks a Chance
"Oh, I'm sorry, is wrapping up the war you started not interesting enough?" Michael Kosta said on Tuesday, after the president called negotiations with Iran "boring."

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

‘Jerome' Review: Darkness Swallows a Three-Way Romance
John J. Caswell's triangular romance set in the early 1990s speaks to us from the smoking psychic caldera left by AIDS.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

Peabo Bryson, Soul Singer Known as the Voice of Love, Dies at 75
He was admired for impassioned duets with singers like Roberta Flack and Celine Dion and for the Disney hits "Beauty and the Beast" and "A Whole New World."

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

MoMA Names Makeda Best as New Photography Chief
Makeda Best, a deputy director of the Oakland Museum of California and a photographer, will lead the department.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

Marcia Lucas, Oscar-Winning ‘Star Wars' Editor, Dies at 80
A close collaborator with George Lucas, her first husband, she was "the warmth and the heart" of his early films, the actor Mark Hamill said.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

The Dark Side of Paul McCartney
Listen to "Eleanor Rigby," "Daytime Nightime Suffering" and more tracks that hint at his gloomier instincts.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

The Best Movies and TV Shows Coming to Netflix in June
A World Cup comedy and a new film by Julian Schnabel are among this month's most promising titles.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

New Federal Guidelines Threaten Almost Half of Graduate Arts Programs
Many musicians, filmmakers and artists earn less than the Education Department's proposed guidelines for alumni, imperiling federal aid for students in those programs.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

Ballet Tech Gave Them Dance. Now They Give Back.
Kids Dance, from the New York Public School for Dance, is debuting a work featuring alumni. That's not the only way former students are involved with the school.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

Martin Scorsese Is Embracing A.I.
In a clear sign of Hollywood's softening stance on artificial intelligence, the cinema icon is backing Black Forest Labs, an image generation start-up.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

Was Churchill a Serious Artist? This Exhibition Says, ‘Yes.'
In the first major British retrospective for over 60 years, a London museum seeks to recast the wartime leader as a painter with emotional depth.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

Movie Highlights at the Tribeca Festival, Now 25
The standouts from this year's lineup include films about a cultlike theater troupe and an experimental dance residency.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

17 Plays (and 3 Festivals) to Jazz Up Your June
Billy Porter, Wayne Brady, Sting and Suzan-Lori Parks are all slated to star on Off Broadway stages this month.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

‘Amadeus' and Beyond: Where to Watch Movies About Composers
The latest adaptation of Peter Shaffer's "Amadeus" joins a rich lineage of fantastical and extravagant musical biopics.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

Obama Center's Two Sides: A Lovely Park and a Forbidding Tower
In Chicago, the $850 million Obama Presidential Center aims to remake a neighborhood with a 19.3-acre community hub and a brooding 225-foot museum.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

Shannon Elizabeth Reflects on Being the Y2K Era's ‘Hot Girl'
Shannon Elizabeth helped define blockbusters like "American Pie" and cult favorites like "Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back." Now, as she enters a new public chapter, she reflects on the era.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 02, 2026

Late Night Updates America on the Lineup for Its 250th Birthday Bash
"Instead of music, the entertainment will be an 80-year-old man yelling about windmills," Jimmy Kimmel said after President Trump said he would headline a summer concert series.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

Andy Halliday, a Star of ‘Vampire Lesbians of Sodom,' Dies at 73
A beloved member of Charles Busch's Theater in Limbo repertory, he had an irrepressibly comic stage presence that masked a shy, tender disposition.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

The Best Movies and TV Shows Coming to Disney , Amazon, AMC , Apple TV and More in June
"The Vampire Lestat," "Hoppers" and "Not Suitable for Work" arrive and "The Bear" returns.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

At Tribeca, a New Look at an '80s Thriller About New York's Gay Underground
The troubled legacy of "Cruising" is the subject of "Mineshaft: The Cruising Murders," a documentary premiering at the Tribeca Festival.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

Tribeca Festival: Andre Holland's Ability to Connect to Audiences Is on Display
The actor's ability to connect to roles is on display in two films, "The Revisionist" and "They Fight," premiering at this year's Tribeca Festival.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

Tribeca Festival 25th Anniversary: An Interview With Robert De Niro, Jane Rosenthal, Rebecca Glashow
Robert De Niro and Jane Rosenthal, who founded the event, and Rebecca Glashow, the new leader of Tribeca Enterprises, reflected on the festival's legacy and ambitions.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

Edward Burns on What It's like to Be a Tribeca Festival Veteran
The filmmaker, who is screening his ninth film at the festival, talked about the importance of Tribeca and what he has learned about sustaining an independent filmmaking career.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

In the ‘Euphoria' Finale, the HBO Show Goes Out With a Whimper
In the end, a show defined by its excesses seemed to be straining for a redemption that it didn't need.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

Azniv Korkejian on Bedouine's ‘Neon Summer Skin'
Azniv Korkejian, the recording artist known as Bedouine, turns her own nomadic history and family survival into comforting, classic folk.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

33 Fun Things to Do in N.Y.C. in June
This month brings an improv all-nighter, James Taylor, "Fraggle Rock" and Puerto Rican pride.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

‘Awake and Sing!' Heads to Broadway With Danny Burstein and Jessica Hecht
Danny Burstein, Jessica Hecht and Jeremy Shamos will star in the Manhattan Theater Club production of Clifford Odets's 1935 play.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

Hoyt Richards, Former Model, on ‘Bring Me The Beauties' and How to Escape a Cult
Richards, a globe-trotting former model, discusses "Bring Me the Beauties: A Model Cult," a new three-part docuseries on HBO.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

Mark and Joaquin Consuelos, Father and Son, Make Broadway Debuts Together
This spring the talk-show host and his youngest child made simultaneous debuts, three weeks and eight blocks apart.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

What's On in London Theaters This Summer
Catherine Tate, Greek classics and plenty in between — here's our selection of West End productions for Londoners and visitors to check out over the coming months.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

9 Comic Books and Graphic Novels to Celebrate Pride Month
Historical chronicles and flights of fancy, all with L.G.B.T.Q. protagonists, arrive starting in June.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

28 New Books to Read in June: Ann Patchett, Maggie O'Farrell, Daniel Kraus and More
Novels by Ann Patchett, Maggie O'Farrell and Dave Eggers; memoirs by Jill Biden and Laverne Cox; sci-fi adventures by a Pulitzer Prize winner; and more.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

Joana Avillez Revisits Her Waterfront Childhood
Joana Avillez took six years to illustrate a new edition of Joseph Mitchell's "The Bottom of the Harbor," which captures the salty New York neighborhood of her youth.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

‘Cape Fear' and 7 More Shows to Watch on TV This Week
A new Apple TV series premieres, and the 79th Tony Awards ceremony will be broadcast live.

NYTimes Arts
Jun 01, 2026

Sam Levinson on Why ‘Euphoria' Had to End This Way. For Good.
In an exclusive interview, Sam Levinson explained why he felt it was time to bring the series to a close and responded to its detractors.

NYTimes Arts
May 31, 2026

‘And Then the Rodeo Burned Down' Review: Tenderness as Transgression
In their Off Broadway debut at Ars Nova, Xhloe and Natasha play two rodeo clowns, until the lights go out and the show takes a turn.

NYTimes Arts
May 31, 2026

Vasana Montgomery, ‘Love Island USA' Contestant, Dismissed After Using Racial Slur
Last season, two contestants were also kicked off the reality show when videos showing them using racial slurs surfaced during filming.

NYTimes Arts
May 31, 2026

Young Moviegoers Power ‘Backrooms' to $82 Million in Ticket Sales
The horror film, which cost $10 million and came from a 20-year-old filmmaker, added to evidence that young people will go to theaters for the right offering.

NYTimes Arts
May 31, 2026

‘Othello' Review: Wendell Pierce Steps Into Iago's Twisted Web
This production in the nation's capital, with an enticingly opaque Iago, attempts to make Shakespeare's tragedy relevant to our age of conspiracies.

NYTimes Arts
May 31, 2026

A Festival of Black Culture With a '90s Vibe
The brothers behind the London party organizers Recess decamped to a seaside amusement park for a two-day event channeling an earlier era of Black British nightlife.

NYTimes Arts
May 30, 2026

Trump Urges Canceling Freedom 250 Concerts After Artists Drop Out
The president had earlier said on social media that he should take the place of "these highly paid, Third Rate ‘Artists,'" saying he gets "larger audiences than Elvis."

NYTimes Arts
May 30, 2026

Trump Suggests He'll Headline Freedom 250 Concerts After Artists Drop Out
The president said on social media that he should replace "these highly paid, Third Rate ‘Artists,'" calling himself "the man who gets much larger audiences than Elvis."

NYTimes Arts
May 30, 2026

Trump Suggests He'll Headline Freedom 250 Concerts After Artists Drop Off
The president said on social media that he should replace "these highly paid, Third Rate ‘Artists,'" calling himself "the man who gets much larger audiences than Elvis."

NYTimes Arts
May 30, 2026

A Judge Ordered Trump's Name to be Removed From the Kennedy Center. What Happens Next?
A federal judge ordered the Kennedy Center to take President Trump's name off the building. What happens next?

NYTimes Arts
May 30, 2026

5 Takeaways From a Kennedy Center Ruling That Angered Trump
A federal judge ordered the Kennedy Center to take President Trump's name off the building. What happens next?

NYTimes Arts
May 30, 2026

Ariana Grande, Ravyn Lenae: 7 Songs We're Talking About This Week
Ariana Grande moves back into pop, Iceage crashes into the cosmos, Ravyn Lenae channels the 1980s and more.

NYTimes Arts
May 30, 2026

‘Spider-Noir' Review: Your Friendly Neighborhood Nicolas Cage
An often unbridled actor gets to play a mutant in a mash-up of superheroes and film noir on Amazon Prime Video.

NYTimes Arts
May 30, 2026

50 Years of Skateboarding at London's Southbank Undercroft
Skateboarders make pilgrimages from around the world to a "found" London space that a grass-roots campaign saved from redevelopment.

NYTimes Arts
May 30, 2026

On ‘Euphoria' and Elsewhere, TV Is Having a Sex Cam Spring
Virtual sex work is nothing new on TV. But this year it is more visible, central to series like "Euphoria," "Margo's Got Money Troubles" and "Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed."

NYTimes Arts
May 30, 2026

7 Podcasts About the Joys of Bird-Watching
These shows offer expert advice and fun facts that will help both novices and enthusiasts get the most out of tuning into the winged world.

NYTimes Arts
May 30, 2026

Ginger Minj Knows You Can Never Go Wrong With Rhinestones
"I blame Dolly Parton for this in some way," the "RuPaul's Drag Race" star said, "but it's just right, it's fun and it's eye-catching."

NYTimes Arts
May 29, 2026

Claude Bessy, Who Ruled Paris Opera Ballet School, Dies at 93
A tall, commanding ballerina, she led one of the world's top dance institutions for decades, though her rigorous methods eventually drew criticism.

NYTimes Arts
May 29, 2026

Kennedy Center Must Remove Trump's Name From Building, Judge Orders
The U.S. district judge also ruled that the institution's board had not done its due diligence when voting to close for renovations.

NYTimes Arts
May 29, 2026

Overlooked No More: Nancy Sheung, Whose Camera Captured Women on Their Own Terms
In 1960s Hong Kong, she used photography to portray women as bold, self-possessed and unconstrained by traditional expectations.

NYTimes Arts
May 29, 2026

Randall Bourscheidt, Wide-Ranging Arts Advocate, Dies at 81
He helped triple New York City's arts budget, led research to promote cultural funding and supported artists with H.I.V. and AIDS.

NYTimes Arts
May 29, 2026

Five International Movies to Stream Now
This month's picks include an Argentine comedy based on a real-life incident, a queer story set in 1980s Chile, a documentary about the aftermath of the Troubles in Belfast and more.

NYTimes Arts
May 29, 2026

Review: ‘Girls Girls Chance Chance Music Music' Loves a Good Riff
In Eisa Davis's new play with live music, at the Vineyard Theater, gifted teenagers find their own rhythms at a summer music program.

NYTimes Arts
May 29, 2026

In the Art of Firelei Báez, Our Histories Are Ready for a Review
Harnessing "trickster" energy, the Dominican painter retooled graphics from the past to reimagine the future.

NYTimes Arts
May 29, 2026

Olivia Rodrigo Discusses the Inspiration Behind Her New Album
The punk-leaning pop star tapped the vibrancy of 1980s new wave and the sentiment of "Sex and the City" on her new album "You Seem Pretty Sad For a Girl So in Love."

NYTimes Arts
May 29, 2026

When a Reluctant Songwriting Star Found Refuge on a New York Stage
A reissue chronicles the Joe's Pub performances of Allen Toussaint, who wrote "Lady Marmalade" and "Working in the Coal Mine," after Hurricane Katrina forced him out of New Orleans.

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