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NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2025

Liz Moore on ‘Long Bright River' and the Slow Burn of Success
Suddenly Liz Moore blazed, comet-like, onto small screens and best-seller lists. But her writing career has been a slow burn.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2025

12 Plays and Musicals Across the U.S. to Brighten the Spring
On stages across the country, there is no shortage of adventurous work, including plays by Lauren Yee, Larissa FastHorse and Zora Howard.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2025

Time to Get Over Eurovision? ‘Hell No!' Says Joost Klein, a Disqualified Contestant Says.
Joost Klein was thrown out of last year's contest after being accused of threatening a camerawoman. On a new album, he's still stuck in that moment.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2025

Othello and Iago, a Marriage Made in Both Heaven and Hell
Because Shakespeare gave his hero and antihero equal weight, the contest between the actors playing them has never been that easy to call.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2025

20 New Books to Read in April: Joan Didion, Emily Henry, Tina Knowles and more
A posthumous Joan Didion book, Emily Henry's latest romance novel, Tina Knowles's memoir and more.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2025

In 50th Anniversary Shows, Danspace Project Pulls Past Into Present
As part of its 50th anniversary, the East Village institution presents reimagined dances by Ishmael Houston-Jones and Fred Holland, Donna Uchizono and Bebe Miller.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2025

My Friend's Show Was Kind of Terrible. What Do I Say When I See Them?
You can always consider telling the truth, but it may not be advisable in this case.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 31, 2025

‘Dying for Sex,' Plus 7 Things to Watch on TV this Week
The Hulu show starring Michelle Williams premieres, and the third season of "White Lotus" wraps up.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2025

‘The White Lotus' Season 3, Episode 7: Lovers and Fighters
"The White Lotus" tells us only enough about the characters' pasts to explain some of the choices they make. Sometimes this works; sometimes it doesn't.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2025

Richard Chamberlain Was a Mega Star in TV Mini-Series ‘The Thorn Birds' and ‘Shogun'
The actor, who died at 90, was the most compelling face of a maximalist, soapy television era.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2025

The Conductor Joana Mallwitz Mixes Intensity With Approachability
Joana Mallwitz, one of Germany's fastest rising stars, makes her Metropolitan Opera debut in "The Marriage of Figaro" on Monday.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2025

Linda Williams, Who Introduced Pornography to Academia, Dies at 78
One of the first to write seriously about a fraught subject, she also played a major role in developing the field of film studies and feminist film theory.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2025

Richard Chamberlain, Actor in ‘Shogun' and ‘Dr. Kildare,' Dies at 90
An overnight star as Dr. Kildare in the 1960s, he achieved new acclaim two decades later as the omnipresent leading man of mini-series.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2025

Nonalcoholic Drinks Go Their Own Way
Plus: wooden sculptures of everyday objects, stylish takes on the fanny pack and more recommendations from T Magazine.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2025

Richard Chamberlain, TV Heartthrob Turned Serious Actor, Dies at 90
An overnight star as Dr. Kildare in the 1960s, he achieved new acclaim two decades later as the omnipresent leading man of mini-series.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2025

‘S.N.L': Live From New York, It's More Military Secrets.
Mikey Madison hosts and Luigi Mangione, Squidward and Ashton Hall make appearances.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 30, 2025

After 120 Years Stored in a Museum, an Indigenous Shrine Returns Home
Taken from a First Nation community in Canada, the shrine recently began a more than 3,000-mile journey back from the American Museum of Natural History in New York.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2025

Johnny Mathis Is Retiring From Touring After Almost 70 Years of Crooning
Mr. Mathis, 89, a pioneer of romantic ballads, is leaving the stage because of his age and memory problems, his website said.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2025

Gai Gherardi, Who Made Eyeglass Frames Fashion Statements, Dies at 78
Her L.A. Eyeworks boutique, which she opened with a friend and fellow optician, was a pioneer in turning ordinary frames into bold, artistic accessories.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2025

Molly Young on Space and Music
A Booker-winning novel; a rocking essay collection.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2025

What to Know About Trump's Order Taking Aim at the Smithsonian
The president's order called for curbing the independence of the sprawling network of museums and urging it to promote "American greatness."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2025

Last Tango in the Guggenheim
Members of the dance company Ballet Hispánico weren't the only ones who swirled amid the art in the museum's rotunda during a recent presentation and tango class.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2025

5 Podcasts Where Truth Is Stranger Than Fiction
These twist-filled shows can offer a real-world escape from the drumbeat of news.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2025

How to Live in the Mall
Want your living space a stone's throw from the Aéropostale and Hot Topic? A new documentary, "Secret Mall Apartment," will show you the way.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 29, 2025

Lucy Dacus on the Art of Frames (and Busting Out of Them)
The singer and songwriter chats about the movies ("Paris, Texas"), music (SZA) and books ("Healing Back Pain") that shape her world as she releases her fourth LP.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

MoMA's Hunt for a New Director Ends With the Ascension of an Insider
The Museum of Modern Art in New York is promoting Christophe Cherix, the chief curator of its drawings and prints department. It will be his first time leading an institution.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

Stream These 17 Movies Before They Leave Netflix in April
A few popular franchises are leaving this month for U.S. subscribers, including the first three "Karate Kid" movies. Catch these before they leave.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

Stream These 17 Titles Before They Leave Netflix in April
A few popular franchises are leaving this month for U.S. subscribers, including the first three "Karate Kid" movies. Catch these before they leave.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

MoMA's New Director Will Be Christophe Cherix
The Museum of Modern Art in New York is promoting Christophe Cherix, who currently leads its drawings and prints department.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

Trump Orders Smithsonian to Promote ‘American Greatness' in Executive Order
The president complained in an executive order that the Smithsonian had advanced "narratives that portray American and Western values as inherently harmful and oppressive."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

Maryland's Kermit the Frog Commencement Choice Gets Mixed Reaction From Students
The University of Maryland says it is honoring Jim Henson, an alumnus, with its choice of commencement speaker. Some students think it is avoiding "real issues."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

New Songs From Mumford & Sons, Maren Morris, Lucy Dacus and More
Hear tracks by Mumford & Sons, Mon Laferte, the Swell Season and others.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

Five Horror Movies to Stream Now
This month's picks include everyday evildoers, Indonesian demons and a smug Brazilian serial killer.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

‘Yellowjackets' Season 3, Episode 8 Recap: ‘Eat It'
A familiar face comes back into the picture, but it's a face with a different name. And questionable motives.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

10 Wild Clips to Help You Understand Andy Kaufman's Greatness
The standup, who's the subject of a new documentary, expanded the ambition of comedy. These videos show how far ahead of his time he was.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

11 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 28, 2025

With ‘The Life List,' Sofia Carson Is a Go-To Netflix Star
After breaking out in Disney Channel's "Descendants," the actress has made a habit of starring in popular streaming films.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

12 Plays and Musicals to Brighten the Spring
On stages across the country, there is no shortage of adventurous work, including plays by Lauren Yee, Larissa FastHorse and Zora Howard.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

Scott Rudin, Producer Exiled for Bad Behavior, Plans Return to Broadway
Rudin stepped away from show business four years ago amid reports that he had bullied assistants. He says he has "a lot more self-control" now.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

Best Historical Fantasy Books
The author of "The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi" recommends fantastical tales grounded in real history.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

‘Secret Mall Apartment' and the Case for Art in Unexpected Places
Jeremy Workman's documentary looks back at a project that may sound like a joke but had serious underpinnings.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

‘The Ballad of Wallis Island' Had a Long Journey Back to the Big Screen
"The Ballad of Wallis Island" came together after a long wait and a little help from Carey Mulligan.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

Through Tears, ‘Mid-Century Modern' Makes Them Laugh
Partway through filming Season 1, the beloved cast member Linda Lavin died. To honor her, the remaining cast and crew decided the show must go on.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

3 Video Games You May Have Missed in March
Karma: The Dark World takes inspirations like BioShock and "Severance" to the next level with creepily surreal and bizarrely utopian set pieces. Expelled! and Centum also delight.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

The Best True Crime to Stream: 1970s and '80s Kidnappings
Across television, film and podcasting, here are five stories of child abductions that shook parents across the United States.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

The ‘Who? Weekly' Podcast Tracks What Fame Even Means Now
As viral stars cross into the mainstream, the hosts of the "Who? Weekly" podcast consider: Is Addison Rae an actual celebrity? Yes. Brittany Broski? Definitely not.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

Jimmy Kimmel Updates the Never-Ending Story of the Signal Leak
"There are many books and stories to come," Kimmel said of the Trump administration's leaky-group-chat scandal, comparing it to the Harry Potter saga.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 28, 2025

David M. Childs, Skyline-Shaping Architect, Dies at 83
He was the chief architect of 1 World Trade Center, which soared in the wake of 9/11. As chairman of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, he left a mark on New York.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Review: ‘Picture of Dorian Gray,' Starring Sarah Snook and 3 Million Pixels
The "Succession" actress plays all 26 roles in this Oscar Wilde classic reimagined as a video spectacle. If only there were less screen time and more IRL contact.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Clive Revill, Original Voice of Emperor Palpatine in ‘Star Wars,' Dies at 94
His voice can be heard for only a minute in "The Empire Strikes Back," but it provided the first draft of a character that would be a mainstay of the franchise for decades.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Bobby Sherman, Former Teen Idol, Has Stage 4 Cancer, His Wife Says
The 81-year-old is known for his breakout role on the 1960s television series "Here Come the Brides" and hits that included "Little Woman."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Armand LaMontagne, Meticulous Sculptor of Sports Greats, Dies at 87
Working in wood, he captured the zeal of New England sports with his exacting, lifelike renderings of Hall of Famers like Ted Williams and Larry Bird.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘Fight for Glory' Is an Ecstatic Treat
This three-part documentary about the 2024 World Series has an interesting task: Retell a story that is already pretty good and pretty legible.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

California Man Sentenced in Scheme to Steal Pricey Violins and Rob a Bank
Prosecutors said that the man persuaded music stores to lend him violins worth tens of thousands of dollars on a trial basis, which he did not return.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Review: Long-Lost ‘Love Life' Still Has a Lot to Say About America
Brian Stokes Mitchell, Kate Baldwin and other top-shelf singers star in an overly sentimental production of the long-lost Kurt Weill and Alan Jay Lerner show.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Pilar Viladas, Architecture and Design Journalist, Dies at 70
Schooled in art history, she brought both authority and a human perspective to her writing and editing for Architectural Digest, HG, The Times and other publications.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

ChatGPT's Studio Ghibli Style Animations Are Almost Too Good
An update to ChatGPT made it easy to simulate Hayao Miyazaki's style of animation, which has flooded social media with memes.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Sundance Picks Boulder, Colo., as Its New Home
The Sundance Institute chose the new location for the movie festival because it had outgrown Park City, Utah, its home for the past 40 years.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Leonard Polonsky, Philanthropist Who Supported the Arts, Dies at 97
After making a fortune in financial services, he funded the arts and made historical artifacts and documents widely available to the public.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

David M. Childs, Architect of 1 World Trade Center, Dies at 83
The antithesis of a "starchitect," he didn't have a recognizable style. But as a partner at Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, he helped transform the New York skyline.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Hollywood Has Not Recovered Jobs Lost During Strikes, Report Says
Many entertainment industry workers have been jobless for months, leading state officials to consider increasing subsidies to keep film and television production in California.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

PS21, a Hub for Forward-Looking Art Upstate, Names a New Director
Vallejo Gantner, a longtime arts administrator in New York City, has taken over as artistic and executive director at PS21 in Chatham, N.Y.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Under Trump, Kennedy Center's Classical Offerings Will (Mostly) Go On
The center's opera company and orchestra are planning typical seasons. But one opera was withdrawn from the lineup by its creative team, which objected to the president's takeover.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Jazzed About Abstraction: Jack Whitten's Show Is a Peak MoMA Moment
Over nearly six decades, this fantastically inventive artist experimented with paint, turning it into a sculptural medium. Our critic calls his survey "scintillating and sweeping."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

5 Classical Music Albums You Can Listen to Right Now
A new take on Wynton Marsalis's "Blues Symphony," a piano cycle by Gregory Spears and Rosa Feola's solo debut are among the highlights.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Scowl Made Hardcore Purists Angry. Now the Band Is Doubling Down.
The punk band fronted by Kat Moss wound its way from a local scene to national attention. Its second album, "We Are All Angels," unpacks the pain of the journey.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

The Truth About F. Scott Fitzgerald's Drunken Brawl in Rome
Biographers took an account of a scuffle in "Tender Is the Night" as a record of a real-life event. But uncovered documents suggest Fitzgerald may have behaved worse than he wrote.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘A Working Man' Review: Blue Collar, Bloody Hands
Jason Statham plays a construction worker who's as deft at breaking bones as he is at building high-rises.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘Julie Keeps Quiet' Review: Coping at Her Own Speed
A teenage regional tennis star moves on at her own pace after her ex-coach is dismissed under a cloud of suspicion.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘The Penguin Lessons' Review: A Unique Approach to Teaching
Steve Coogan plays Tom Michell, an English teacher in 1970s Argentina, whose small new friend makes his class a hit.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘Grand Tour' Review: A Quiet Knockout
The Portuguese filmmaker Miguel Gomes's black-and-white film follows a colonial official on a 20th-century odyssey across Asia, with his fiancée in pursuit.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘Holland' Review: Nicole Kidman Goes Dutch
Set in a Michigan town designed to evoke the Netherlands, this thriller has red herring on the menu.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Center for Art and Advocacy Opens Showcase for Formerly Incarcerated Artists
The nonprofit Center for Art and Advocacy, designed as a steppingstone to the art world, opens a public exhibition and education space in Bedford-Stuyvesant.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

At 50, the Wooster Group Is Experimenting on Itself
Elizabeth LeCompte and Kate Valk reflect on their decades of making daring theater together. Just don't call it a nostalgic exercise.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘Viet and Nam' Review: A Soft Kiss Underground
Truong Minh Quy's haunting romance between two Vietnamese coal miners contemplates war and loss with pained elegance.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘Holy Cow' Review: How to Become a Big Cheese
Louise Courvoisier's debut feature follows a teenager in the French Alps who, when thrust into caring for his sister, forges a path in cheese making.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘The Friend' Review: The Writer vs. the Great Dane
Naomi Watts plays a writer in mourning who is given a formidable gift from a friend in this adaptation of the Sigrid Nunez novel.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘Death of a Unicorn' Review: Into the Woods (Chomp, Chomp)
Paul Rudd and Jenna Ortega play a father and daughter who run down a mystical beast and end up running amok with a monstrous brood.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘The Ballad of Wallis Island' Review: A Sour Note
Carey Mulligan briefly warms this damp, downbeat comedy about two lonely men and their musical obsession.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

‘Art for Everybody' Review: The Hidden Life of the ‘Painter of Light'
Thomas Kinkade turned himself into a ubiquitous brand — but there was more to him than that, a new documentary shows.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

How ‘Buena Vista Social Club' Brings a Beloved Song to Life on Broadway
Of all the "Buena Vista Social Club" songs, the beloved "Chan Chan" is the most recognizable. But figuring out where in the musical to put it became a challenge.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Is It a Mirror or a ‘Mirror'? Ask Joseph Kosuth.
A deconstructed retrospective for the pioneer of Conceptual art shows off both the exhilarating highs and the sterile dead-ends of making ideas into artworks.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Atomfall's Nuclear Disaster Has a Toxic Element: Tedium
An alternative history of the worst nuclear event in British history is burdened by narrative tropes and uninspired characters.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

The Nail Artist Mei Kawajiri's Mind-Boggling Creations
Mei Kawajiri hand-paints and sculpts custom designs for a clientele that includes Heidi Klum and Bad Bunny.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 27, 2025

Late Night Can't Quit the Group Chat
"This operation was about as secretive as a Fortnite Twitch stream," Jimmy Kimmel said of U.S. officials' leaked discussion of a plan to attack Yemen.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

Herb Greene, Who Photographed the Grateful Dead and Other 1960s Rock Acts, Dies at 82
One of the first to shoot the Grateful Dead, he also memorably chronicled many of the other bands that were on the scene in the late 1960s.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

Duke Says ‘White Lotus' Went ‘Too Far' With School References
In a show that features an array of disturbing story lines, the actions — and wardrobe — of a character have gone "too far" for the university.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

Eddie Adcock, Musician Who Pushed Bluegrass Forward, Dies at 86
A master improviser on banjo, he understood the genre's roots but was also in the forefront of the later "newgrass" movement.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

L.J. Smith, Author of ‘Vampire Diaries' Book Series, Dies at 66
She wrote seven books in a series that went on to be a hit TV show. After she was replaced by ghostwriters, she reclaimed her characters online in fan fiction.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

Dennis McDougal, True-Crime Author and Muckraker of the Movie Industry, Dies at 77
The author of more than a dozen books and an award-winning documentary, he died in a car crash in Southern California.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

Eddie Adcock, Virtuoso Who Pushed Bluegrass Forward, Dies at 86
A master improviser on banjo, he understood the genre's roots but was also in the forefront of the later "newgrass" movement.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

Review: Can Hubbard Street Dance Chicago Find a New Voice?
On a program with three New York premieres, the company seems stuck in an international style, though there are flickers of something more distinctive.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

How ‘No Other Land' Became an Unlikely Box Office Success
The Oscar-winning documentary has surpassed $2 million at the box office despite the lack of a traditional distribution deal.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

When the Wild Child Egon Schiele Grew Up
Some of the artist's most psychologically insightful work came in the final years of his life — a mature period cut short by a pandemic.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

In ‘Streetcar,' Patsy Ferran Gives Blanche a Nervy New Read
The London-based actress has been heralded as one of the most talented of her generation. Still, she worried audiences would balk at her "very unconventional Blanche."

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

Three Great Documentaries to Stream
In this month's picks, sheep, shirkers and coup d'état soundtracks.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

‘Common Side Effects' Is a Stylish and Trippy Animated Thriller
Filled with smart dialogue, specificity and visual wonder, this Max series is a good choice to help fill the "Severance"-shaped hole in your heart.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

New A.I. Project Explores Mysteries of Delacroix, Master of Romanticism
Eric and Wendy Schmidt and the Sorbonne will fund a new program to digitize Delacroix's papers and identify other artists who may have contributed to his murals and paintings.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

For Joan Didion, Mementos of Her Daughter's Childhood Became Material
The opening of the Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne archives in the New York Public Library reveals unseen aspects of their family life, and approach to writing.

NYTimes Arts
Mar 26, 2025

‘Modern Love' Podcast: How Orville Peck Got Addicted to Love and Came Out the Other Side
The country musician talks about yearning as a theme in his life and songs, and why he's letting go of his mask for his Broadway debut.

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