“The Bear” serves its last course, “Ted Lasso” gets back on the pitch, and Larry David makes a TV show with the Obamas. Read more ...
“The Bear” serves its last course, “Ted Lasso” gets back on the pitch, and Larry David makes a TV show with the Obamas. Read more ...
In a fast-paced sci-fi fantasy, infused with epic intentions and starring Emily Blunt, Josh O’Connor and Colman Domingo, the filmmaker brings the rest of us home. Read more ...
Our critic Jason Farago on how the artist conceived a new way forward for landscape painting. Read more ...
Chad Smith, the orchestra’s president, admitted missteps in terminating Andris Nelsons’s contract but stood by the decision and won’t step down. Read more ...
Our conversations over the years were, at times, philosophical, metaphysical, honest about the daily circumstances of our lives, and dishy, a photography critic says, as he looks back. Read more ...
When a son got curious about the origins of a painting his mother bought at a secondhand shop decades ago, Google Gemini had some intriguing thoughts. Read more ...
The BBC said there would be no Christmas special this year and is looking for a production company to take on the sci-fi classic. Followers have already dubbed this uncertain period “the Wilderness Years 2.0.” Read more ...
Hunted by slavers, the abolitionist escaped briefly to Britain and Ireland. A new show at the Irish Arts Center combines his speeches with performances by local students. Read more ...
An already unwieldy film feels more queasy when taken in cultural context. Read more ...
At the Nevada Museum of Art, five examples of artist-activists shining a light on the Great Basin Desert and beyond. Read more ...
The final curtain is coming down on two Tony Award-winning performances, a reboot of a 1980s musical and one of the best plays in August Wilson’s American Century Cycle. Read more ...
Orlan transformed herself through plastic surgery in the 1990s for an art project. Now, she is lecturing at the Louvre about changing perceptions of beauty. Read more ...
Recordings of songs by Schubert, music by Martyna Basta and symphonies by Martinu are among our selections. Read more ...
The supernatural mixes with secular modernity, family dynamics and feminism in a new London production of “Under the Shadow.” Read more ...
For the Public Theater’s Shakespeare in the Park, the director Saheem Ali presents a strangely low-energy version of the tragedy. Read more ...
One day before a deadline to take the president’s name off its facade, the arts institution appealed a federal judge’s ruling that also temporarily blocked it from closing. Read more ...
Self-taught, he became a go-to portraitist for politicians, rock stars and other celebrities. He also documented Indigenous people and inmates on death row. Read more ...
RuPaul stars as the American president, who must contend with an unfolding transit crisis and drag queens galore as a dangerous storm approaches. Read more ...
Three women living in Tunisia shelter Kenza, a young girl who survived a shipwreck, while they deal with their own issues. Read more ...
An origin story that proves the dark flame of Mexican fantasy is alive and well. Read more ...
Xie Miao and Joe Taslim kick butt and take names in Kenji Tanigaki’s Asian action extravaganza. Read more ...
To promote “Masters of the Universe,” Mattel, the toymaker behind the movie, tapped into one of the hottest trends in health and wellness. Read more ...
In this strange, sensual dramedy, a lusty 20-something and her grieving Persian-British mother travel to an island resort meant for honeymooners. Read more ...
“$12,000? For a coin? Does it come with a used Honda Civic?” Lydic said. Read more ...
In the late 1960s, he and Saul Ilson oversaw a variety show known for its social and political satire, and together they helped fight network censors over its content. Read more ...
Dancing pigeons, mystery stew and a nostalgia machine. Read more ...
A self-taught artist, he brought narrative to modern photography with sequences of staged black-and-white images, often accompanied by wry or lyrical captions. Read more ...
The season’s best new show is a horror-comedy rooted in a timely idea: Is the past a treasure to preserve or a monster to escape? Read more ...
At Lincoln Center, the guitarist Reg Bloor, Branca’s widow, will conduct his music for the first time: “Symphony No. 13 (Hallucination City) for 100 Guitars.” Read more ...
Meg Webster creates works that are often fleeting. At 82, with a new show at the Paula Cooper Gallery, now she’s looking for a place in history. Read more ...
For her Broadway debut, the comedian hired a trainer, read lines with her daughter and, when she needed it most, was saved by improv. Read more ...
Both “The Trial” and Titanium Court, a lauded Match-3 game, trade in the frustration of a system of nonsensical rules. Read more ...
Patti Smith, David Byrne, Youssou N’Dour and other artists remember the performances, chance meetings and rainouts of the concert series that has defined New York City summers. Read more ...
In her new history, “Cocked and Boozy,” Brooke Barbier illuminates the pervasive role that alcohol played throughout the colonial era. Read more ...
The late night host called Trump “the first sitting president to shut down a major United States city so he could take a nap in front of a sold-out crowd at the N.B.A. finals.” Read more ...
After nearly nine years of practice, he made John Milton’s epic poem vividly dramatic for audiences and inspired a study of his “memory virtuosity.” Read more ...
Listen to tracks from War, Vicki Lawrence and other artists who had hits in May 1973. Read more ...
Mr. Reiner, who has pleaded not guilty, wants money from his $1.5 million trust fund to rehire a prominent criminal defense lawyer. Read more ...
His socially engaged works, created over a 70-year career, sought to engage viewers through shifting lights, motors and even Ping-Pong balls. Read more ...
A go-to designer for directors like Bob Fosse and Paul Mazursky, he won two Oscars and created Olivia Newton-John’s indelibly sultry ensemble in “Grease.” Read more ...
Since her mother’s death, Emma Dante has used the stage as a space to dive into her Sicilian roots — and the contradictions of family life. Read more ...
Gustavo Dudamel’s last concerts at Walt Disney Concert Hall as the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s maestro were a symbol of his impact after 17 years. Read more ...
The actor has become a reliable horror star — but he’s also delivered compelling performances in offbeat movies like “Dinner in America” and “Strange Darling.” Read more ...
New York City Ballet ended its season on a positive note with “Coppélia,” but the repertory tipped too heavily into unimportant ballets. Read more ...
A new exhibition charts the cyclical forces destroying nightlife spots, even as independent spaces fight developers, complaining neighbors and shifting social habits. Read more ...
After his 2014 musical failed on Broadway, the musician is bringing a revised version of it to the Metropolitan Opera for a limited run this week. Read more ...
Across the United States, orchestras are programming more live performances of movie soundtracks in a bid for box office revenue. Read more ...
Jon Stewart called the president’s interview his “worst nightmare: a woman who won’t stop asking pertinent questions.” Read more ...
Our chief theater critic, Helen Shaw, shares her highlights of the Tony Awards on Sunday in New York City. Read more ...
Many of the winning plays and musicals are still onstage, and some are closing soon. Here’s a guide to help you navigate the field and find tickets. Read more ...
Mr. Bruel, long a beloved celebrity in France, has denied allegations raised by 13 women dating to 1997. Read more ...
Thousands of people contributed their Broadway favorites of the season ahead of the Tony Awards. Here’s how their votes stacked up. Read more ...
The long-running sketch comedy show proved its power during the Tony Awards on Sunday, with Lorne Michaels and several former stars grabbing the spotlight. Read more ...
Scott Rudin is a lead producer of “Death of a Salesman,” but he kept a low profile this awards season after a four-year hiatus prompted by bullying allegations. Read more ...
In a Pulitzer-winning book, “The Radicalism of the American Revolution,” he wrote that the colonists rose up against an entire worldview, not just against taxation. Read more ...