만족하고 돌아가는 곳이 강남달토야?
만족하고 돌아가는 곳이 만족하고 돌아가는 곳이 강남달토야? 이 질문은 강남 지역에서 사람들이 식사나 시간을 보내는 공간을 선택할 때 자연스럽게 떠오르는 궁금증입니다. 단순히 음식만 맛있다고 해서, 혹은 인테리어가 예쁘다고 해서 방문객이 만족감을 느끼는 것은 아닙니다. 공간, 서비스, 분위기, 메뉴, 편의성 등 여러 요소가 어우러져야 진정으로 만족하며 돌아갈 수 있습니다. 강남달토는 이러한 여러 요소를 잘 갖추고 있어 […]
Read MoreRobert Redford’s Many Types of Heroes
The Outlaw, the Romantic, the Survivor: From the Sundance Kid to his final role, he showed different ways to be a hero onscreen.
Read MoreRonny Whyte, Cabaret Singer Who Personified Elegance, Dies at 88
Like his friend and mentor Bobby Short, he exuded haute style while imbuing American standards with grace and wit.
Read MoreHe Left the Prejudice of America. But His Music Came Home.
The centennial of Robert Owens, a composer who worked abroad and assimilated into German culture, is being celebrated with a festival in Nebraska.
Read MoreSotheby’s Lands a Leonard Lauder Art Collection Worth More Than $400 Million
The collector’s trove of 55 works, including Klimt, Matisse and Munch, will be auctioned in November.
Read MoreHighlights From the 2025 Emmy Awards: ‘The Pitt’ Wins Best Drama, ‘The Studio’ Best Comedy
“Adolescence” won best limited series and three acting awards, and “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert,” which was canceled by CBS, was named best talk series.
Read More
The Road to the Emmys
Katherine LaNasa received her first Emmy nomination, for “The Pitt,” after a long star-crossed career. “I love acting, but also I’m very formed; I’ve been through experiences,” she said. “I’ve sat at the bedside while people died. I’ve given birth. I’ve raised children. I’ve had cancer. So you know, this is just a nice thing.” Read […]
Read MoreHermeto Pascoal, Prolific Brazilian Composer, Dies at 89
A self-taught multi-instrumentalist, he rose from a childhood of rural privation to become a favorite of jazz musicians and audiences around the world.
Read MoreParamount Criticizes Celebrity-Endorsed Israeli Film Boycott
The film studio, which some say has turned rightward under its new owner, said it disagreed with thousands of Hollywood professionals pledging to boycott Israeli film institutions.
Read MoreMarilyn Diamond, Who Wrote a Blockbuster Diet Book, Dies at 81
“Fit for Life,” which she wrote with her husband, was a best seller in the 1980s promoting good health ahead of weight loss. But doctors were critical.
Read MoreGreat Fantasy Books With Unlikely Heroes
Morally ambiguous killers, social outcasts, bumbling misfits and misunderstood monsters take center stage in these thrilling, and deeply human, books.
Read MoreJune Wilkinson, Pinup Star and Screen Siren, Is Dead at 85
Christened “the Bosom” by Playboy magazine, she rode her voluptuous figure to fame and became known as “the most photographed nude in America.”
Read MoreArvo Pärt Reached Pop Star Status. Now He’s Ready to Rest.
Pärt’s 90th birthday has inspired celebrations, including at Carnegie Hall, even as the renowned composer has stopped writing.
Read More‘The Brothers Size’ Review: A Spare and Poetic Restaging
In honor of its 20th anniversary, Tarell Alvin McCraney’s play gets a fiercely minimalist production at the Shed.
Read MoreMarilyn Monroe’s Los Angeles Home Is Saved From Demolition
A judge denied a neighbor’s petition to raze the Spanish-style hacienda, which the City Council had declared a cultural landmark.
Read MoreStuart Craig, Who Designed the Movie World of Harry Potter, Dies at 83
A three-time Oscar winner for production design, he was one of the few people to work on all eight Potter films and their three “Fantastic Beasts” spinoffs.
Read MoreBarnett Shepherd, Champion of Staten Island’s Heritage, Dies at 87
A longtime resident, he devoted his career to Historic Richmond Town and Sailors’ Snug Harbor, two of the borough’s most important cultural institutions.
Read MoreKara Walker Deconstructs a Statue, and a Myth
As part of the group exhibition “Monuments,” the artist took a Stonewall Jackson bronze and transformed it into a radically new, unsettled thing.
Read MoreMemorable Moments of the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards: Mariah Carey, Lady Gaga and More
Mariah Carey and Busta Rhymes were honored for the first time, Lady Gaga crossed town and Doja Cat took it back to the 1980s.
Read MoreWest Point Alumni Group Cancels Award Honoring Tom Hanks
The group was to bestow the Sylvanus Thayer Award on the actor, but it said it was canceling the event to focus on preparing academy cadets for the future.
Read MoreCharlie Sheen Is Ready to Tell You Everything
In a new memoir and documentary, the actor known for “Two and a Half Men,” “Platoon” and a debauched life that nearly killed him puts it all out there.
Read MoreMark Volman, Singer of ‘Happy Together’ and Other Hits, Dies at 78
In the 1960s, he and his fellow singer Howard Kaylan embodied the feel-good sound of the Turtles. The two later found new fame as Flo & Eddie.
Read MoreThe Best Movies and TV Shows Coming to Netflix in September
A new series from the creator of “Peaky Blinders” and another starring Jude Law and Jason Bateman are among the highlights this month.
Read MoreHassan Ouakrim, Who Brought Moroccan Dance to the U.S., Dies
A director and choreographer, he introduced Berber dances and music to New York’s downtown theater scene. He also staged elaborate soirees for the wealthy, one attended by Donald Trump.
Read MoreIn a New Memoir, Elizabeth Gilbert Gets Dark. Very Dark.
A new memoir finds the self-help icon locked in a destructive romantic relationship with her best friend, who relapsed while fighting terminal cancer.
Read MoreWhat to See in Galleries in September
This week in Newly Reviewed, Travis Diehl considers a show on Smell-O-Vision, Edward Burtynsky’s exurban cacophony, Catharine Czudej’s playful transactions and a group show with a maze of water bottles.
Read More21 New Nonfiction Books to Read This Fall
Memoirs by Margaret Atwood, Elizabeth Gilbert and Lionel Richie; history from Jill Lepore and David Nasaw; and plenty more.
Read MoreStephen Colbert Starts the Final ‘Late Show’ Season With a Toast
John Oliver joined Colbert for the Season 11 premiere (and a little champagne). “The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City” came up.
Read MoreDebbie Gibson Wants to Take Your Photo (She Won’t Steal Your Phone)
The 1980s pop star, who tells her story in a new memoir, chats about how she stays connected to teen culture, the glorious artifice of Las Vegas and dancing her own way.
Read MoreThe Fall’s Most Anticipated Albums: 10 Picks
Cardi B’s long-awaited return, Jeff Tweedy’s low-key magnum opus, Silvana Estrada’s latest poetic release and more.
Read More‘Dances With Wolves’ Actor Graham Greene Dies at 73
The First Nations actor, who appeared in “Dances With Wolves” and other Hollywood blockbusters, remained active in Canadian film, theater and television.
Read MoreSylvain Amic, Musée d’Orsay President Who Aimed to Democratize Art, Dies at 58
His formative years in sub-Saharan Africa had made him sensitive to France’s restitution of treasures taken from the continent during colonial times.
Read More‘The Paper,’ Plus 7 Things to Watch on TV this Week
A mockumentary series about a local newspaper, from the creators of “The Office,” and the MTV Video Music Awards air.
Read MoreZdena Salivarova, Publisher Who Kept Czech Literature Alive, Dies at 91
In exile in Canada, she and her husband, the novelist Josef Skvorecky, published books that had been outlawed by the Soviet-backed Communist regime.
Read MoreAn Under-the-Radar Art Collection Could Fetch $180 Million at Auction
The Weis family savored their masterpieces at home but didn’t lend them to museums. The trove was “so private” that a Christie’s expert didn’t know what was in it.
Read MorePro-Palestinian Protesters at the Venice Film Festival Raise Gaza War
In the days leading up to the festival, hundreds of film professionals signed an open letter demanding that the star-studded event take a stance against the crisis in Gaza.
Read MoreFrank Price, Hollywood Studio Chief Several Times Over, Dies at 95
He ran Universal’s television and movie businesses and had two stints at Columbia. Running a studio, he said, was “sort of like being the head of a small country.”
Read MoreVail Settles Lawsuit After Canceling Artist’s Residency Over Gaza Views
In settling a lawsuit brought by the A.C.L.U., the Colorado town agreed to fund an art program for underrepresented people and provide cultural sensitivity training to some of its employees.
Read MoreJoan Mellen, Whose Bobby Knight Biography Sparked Debate, Dies at 83
Some sportswriters accused her of “deifying” Indiana’s irascible basketball coach. A professor of English, she also wrote about Marilyn Monroe and the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
Read More‘The Wizard of Oz’ Is Getting an A.I. Glow Up.
The classic film was “enhanced” using A.I. tools so that it could be an immersive experience at the Sphere in Las Vegas.
Read MoreNic and Olandria on What the ‘Love Island’ Cameras Missed
The couple kept fans guessing on their romance this season.
Read MoreAs PBS Stations Confront Cuts, American History Takes a Hit
The documentary series “American Experience” begins an abbreviated schedule this week. A victim of the federal funding take-back, it has suspended production and laid off its staff.
Read MoreKneecap Cancels U.S. Tour, Calling U.K. Terrorism Charge a ‘Witch Hunt’
One member of the Northern Irish rap group, which is known for its anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian views, is accused of displaying a flag supporting Hezbollah.
Read MoreFor the National Gallery of Victoria, a Cabinet of Virtuosity
Nipa Doshi’s furniture commission, which evokes both religious and self-care rituals, honors some of the influential women in her life.
Read More5 Takeaways from the ‘Love Island U.S.A.’ Season 7 Reunion
After a messy season that had viewers rapt, the cast addressed relationship statuses, online rumors and whether apologies were coming or not.
Read MoreKatherine LaNasa Earned Her Role in ‘The Pitt’ the Hard Way
The actress received an Emmy nod for her performance as a seasoned E.R. nurse, a woman who has seen it all and lived to keep fighting. So has LaNasa.
Read More‘Thursday Murder Club,’ Plus 6 Things to Watch on TV This Week
The book adaptation of the mystery series comes to Netflix, and Peacock airs the “Love Island USA” reunion.
Read MoreDavid Ketchum, Who Played the Cooped-Up Agent 13 on ‘Get Smart,’ Dies at 97
He was frequently crammed into airport lockers, popcorn machines and grandfather clocks as Agent 13, the long-suffering spy.
Read MoreThe Menendez Brothers’ Momentum Built for Years. It Was Dashed in 2 Days.
Young people energized a push for redemption — and the release of Lyle and Erik. Parole commissioners took a different view and a harder line.
Read MoreAs Trump Targets the Smithsonian, Museums Across the U.S. Feel a Chill
Some museums are changing or canceling exhibits, especially those that involve artworks that engage with gender, sexuality and race.
Read MoreChris Doyle, Artist Who Brought the Inanimate to Life, Dies at 66
He used animation and other media to create worlds inhabited by anthropomorphic machines and industrious creatures. One curator described his work as “Narnia on acid.”
Read MoreWhite House Lists Smithsonian Exhibits It Finds Objectionable
The Trump administration highlighted material dealing with topics like sexuality, slavery and immigration.
Read More‘Eenie Meanie’ Review: Road Rage
This heist movie features Samara Weaving as a getaway driver with an unruly ex-boyfriend who owes a local kingpin serious cash.
Read MoreA Giant Wyeth Mural Comes Out of the Vault, Bearing Family Stories
N.C. Wyeth’s colossal 1932 mural, “Apotheosis of the Family,” re-emerges in a gleaming new round barn after years in storage.
Read MoreAyo Edebiri and Don Cheadle to Star in Broadway ‘Proof’ Revival
The play, by David Auburn, won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 2001.
Read MoreBridget Everett Says a Best Friend Can Be Your Greatest Love (Encore)
The Somebody Somewhere star is tired of the same old love stories. Her show about friendship earned her an Emmy nomination.
Read More‘Alien: Earth’ Season 1, Episode 3 Recap: Weird Science
A lot of folks, human and otherwise, seem very interested in getting their hands on the newly crash-landed alien specimens. What could go wrong?
Read MoreWhen Musical Directions Don’t Say What to Do, but How to Be
What is the purpose of a poem, an illustration or a nonsensical phrase in a score? If it makes musicians stop and think, that’s a good start.
Read MoreJoe Caroff, Who Gave James Bond His Signature 007 Logo, Dies at 103
A quiet giant in graphic design, he created posters for hundreds of movies, including “West Side Story” and “A Hard Day’s Night.” But his work was often unsigned.
Read MoreDoris Lockhart Saatchi, 88, Critic and Collector of Cutting-Edge Art, Dies
With her husband, Charles Saatchi, she assembled one of the world’s top collections of contemporary art, featuring works by Andy Warhol, Julian Schnabel, Cy Twombly and many others.
Read MoreRonnie Rondell, Stuntman Set on Fire for Pink Floyd Cover, Dies at 88
He was also known for his performances in “Twister” and “The Matrix Reloaded,” and came from a family of stunt performers.
Read MoreTerence Stamp, Luminary of 1960s British Cinema, Dies at 87
Known for his “heartbreak blue eyes,” he starred in “Billy Budd” and “The Collector,” and had a memorable role in “Superman” and “Superman II.”
Read MoreOverlooked No More: Molly Drake, a Maternal Musical Force Behind Nick Drake’s Sound
She was a poet, singer, composer and pianist whose melancholic home recordings from the 1950s hit on universal themes of despair, heartbreak, longing and loss.
Read MoreHow BigXthaPlug Went From Solitary Confinement to Nashville’s Favorite Rapper
The Dallas M.C. announced a country album on a whim. Luke Combs, Shaboozey and Ella Langley took him seriously.
Read MoreTommy McLain, the King of Swamp Pop, Dies at 85
Playing a blend of rock, R&B and zydeco, he had a hit in 1966 with “Sweet Dreams” and inspired Elvis Costello, Nick Lowe and many others.
Read MoreReview: ‘Night Always Comes,’ Whether You Have a Home or Not
Vanessa Kirby plays a woman who has 24 desperate hours to scrape up the $25,000 that will buy a measure of security for her and the brother she protects.
Read More‘And Just Like That …’ Series Finale Recap: My Everything
The “Sex and the City” revival ended on an empowering but bittersweet note for Carrie and the crew … and also with Barry White.
Read MoreThe South Korean Collector Who Fell for Posters From Communist Poland
Oh Hwangtaek has amassed one of the largest collections of Polish posters outside Poland. He shares his unlikely passion at his own museum in Seoul.
Read MoreAt the Kennedy Center, Trump Puts His Pop Culture Obsession on Display
President Trump held forth about the nature of show business and his own tortured relationship with celebrity.
Read MoreFive Horror Movies to Stream Now
This month’s terrors come from stalkers, a witch, a slimy creature — and low blood sugar.
Read More‘Alien: Earth’ Episodes 1 and 2 Recap: Gross Encounters
Noah Hawley’s new expansion to the “Alien” franchise introduces a host of new characters and concepts — and some disgusting new monsters.
Read MoreMichelle Obama and Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson Draw Crowds on Martha’s Vineyard
In Oak Bluffs, film premieres, book fairs and star-studded soirees attracted fans who came for the art and stayed for the community.
Read MoreChristophe de Menil, Art Patron and Designer, Is Dead at 92
A Parisian-born oil heiress, she collected art and supported major artists, designed costumes and moved in rarefied social and cultural circles.
Read MoreBrian Cox Is Hauntingly Good in ‘Make It Happen’
The “Succession” star, playing the ghost of the Scottish philosopher Adam Smith, is a bright spot in a new play about the 2008 banking crunch.
Read MoreCalifornia’s ‘Souldies’ Scene Puts a Fresh Spin on a Beloved Sound
For decades, a soft-touch style of soul music has found a strong Chicano and Latino audience in Southern California. A record label based there is helping it bloom.
Read MoreTerry Reid, Rock Singer Known as ‘Superlungs,’ Dies at 75
He missed his chance to be Led Zeppelin’s lead vocalist, but his solo work — and his otherworldly voice — drew raves from Aretha Franklin and others.
Read MoreThe Comedian Robby Hoffman Steals Scenes in ‘Hacks’ and ‘Dying for Sex’
Robby Hoffman, who made her way from a Hasidic community in Brooklyn all the way to Hollywood, has stood out in small roles in “Hacks” and “Dying for Sex.”
Read MoreAfter a Young Arts Patron’s Donation Did Not Clear, He Was Found Dead
Shortly before Matthew Christopher Pietras’s body was discovered, the Metropolitan Opera had been told that the $10 million he had just donated did not belong to him.
Read More‘Outlander’: Matthew B. Roberts Loves a Love Story
The showrunner behind the swoony Starz series and its new prequel discusses romance as a viable TV genre, and why he keeps torturing his characters.
Read More
‘Weapons’ | Anatomy of a Scene
I am Zach Cregger, writer, and director of “Weapons.” So at this point in the movie, Justine Gandy, who’s the teacher who presides over the class that went missing — She’s by the way, played by the brilliant Julia Garner — She has become so frustrated with the lack of action and satisfaction from the […]
Read MoreWhat to See in N.Y.C. Galleries in August
This week in Newly Reviewed, Jillian Steinhauer covers Agnieszka Kurant’s unnerving technology, a group show that nods to history, and Marian Spore Bush’s otherworldly paintings.
Read MoreKelley Mack, ‘Walking Dead’ Actress, Dies at 33
Ms. Mack was diagnosed with a malignant tumor in her nervous system late last year.
Read MoreEddie Palmieri, Latin Music’s Dynamic Innovator, Dies at 88
He roped salsa into conversation with jazz, rock, funk and even modern classical music. “A new world music,” one critic said, “is being born.”
Read MoreThe ‘Hamilton’ Effect: 10 Revolutionary Years on Broadway
Lin-Manuel Miranda’s much-loved musical opened on Broadway a decade ago, ushering in a new era of race-conscious casting, audience outreach and even stardom.
Read MoreEdinburgh Fringe in Photos: The Streets Are Alive
Thousands of performers were hawking their shows on the first weekend of the Scottish arts extravaganza.
Read MoreLas Culturistas Culture Awards, Plus 5 Things to Watch on TV This Week
Bravo airs the ceremony hosted by Bowen Yang and Matt Rogers. And Apple TV+ releases the second season of “Platonic.”
Read MoreSean ‘Diddy’ Combs Is Denied Bail, and Will Remain Jailed Until Sentencing
The music mogul, who was convicted in July of two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution, had asked to be released before his sentencing on Oct. 3.
Read MoreA Breaking Musical Is a Fringe Hit. Just Don’t Mention Raygun.
The Australian breaker tried to shut down a musical about her. Now, it’s attracting dancing crowds at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.
Read MoreLoni Anderson, Star of ‘WKRP in Cincinnati,’ Dies at 79
She won Emmy nominations for her sitcom role as a deceptively smart radio station receptionist. Her divorce from Burt Reynolds landed her in the tabloids.
Read MoreSuperman’s Earthly Birthplace? It’s Cleveland, and It’s Embracing Its Hero.
A monument featuring Superman and finally honoring his creators and the model for Lois Lane will go on display this weekend.
Read MoreProduction Manager Is Killed in Accident at Jacob’s Pillow, Authorities Say
Jacob’s Pillow canceled weekend programming as staff members grieved the death of Kat Sirico, who was moving staging platforms that toppled, the authorities said.
Read MoreTony Hale Cheers Himself Up With ‘Veep’ Blooper Reels
“I watch show bloopers more than I watch shows,” the actor said. “There’s a freedom that is so full of accidental joy that completely energizes me.”
Read MoreJeannie Seely, Who Pushed Boundaries and Broke Hearts at the Grand Ole Opry, Dies at 85
She blazed a trail for women in country music with the candor of her songs and her bold fashion sense. She was also the first woman to host a segment on the Opry.
Read MoreFun Things to Do in NYC in August 2025
Looking for something to do in New York? See what Taylor Tomlinson is up to, let a clowder of onscreen cats entertain you, or catch some recently restored silent-era gems.
Read More‘And Just Like That …’ Season 3, Episode 10 Recap: Moving On
This week the flirtation between Carrie and Duncan escalated to a whole lot more than just a “laugh” and “sip of Scotch.”
Read MoreKamala Harris Sells a Memoir About the 2024 Campaign
The former vice president has written a book about her run for president in 2024. It will come out next month.
Read MoreLove Jack Kerouac? Read These Great American Road Trip Books Next.
Come along for the ride as our three critics back-seat drive their way through America. (Rest stops provided.)
Read MoreOzzy Osbourne’s Coffin Will Be Taken Through His Hometown’s Streets Before Funeral
A cortege took the singer’s coffin through the streets of his hometown, Birmingham, England, on Wednesday.
Read MoreSpace Out With 11 Far-Out Songs
Muse about the universe to a playlist stocked with Björk, Sufjan Stevens, Frank Sinatra and more.
Read MoreBooker Prize Nominees Include Novels by Kiran Desai, Katie Kitamura and Susan Choi
The 13 titles nominated for the prestigious British literary award also include books by David Szalay, Maria Reva and Claire Adam.
Read MoreJohn Saladino, ‘Sensualist’ Designer With a Love of Ruins, Dies at 86
A renowned interior designer, he created instantly recognizable rooms using lush fabrics, oversize antiques and imperfectly plastered walls that convey a sense of age.
Read More‘Billy Joel: And So It Goes’: 5 Takeaways From the Film’s Conclusion
The HBO documentary about the singer and songwriter wrapped with a deep exploration of his tabloid troubles, creative process and decision to return to live performance.
Read MoreTom Lehrer, Musical Satirist With a Dark Streak, Dies at 97
A mathematician by training, he acquired a devoted following with songs that set sardonic lyrics to music that was often maddeningly cheerful.
Read More‘The Fantastic Four: First Steps’ Breaks a Box Office Curse
The movie, the fifth effort to adapt the comic characters for the big screen, was expected to collect about $220 million worldwide in its first weekend.
Read MoreHe Read (at Least) 3,599 Books in His Lifetime. Now Anyone Can See His List.
After Dan Pelzer died this month at 92, his children uploaded the handwritten reading list to what-dan-read.com, hoping to inspire readers everywhere.
Read More2 Novels for Double Lives
An unhappy housewife; an underground radical.
Read MoreGary Smith, TV Producer Who Put a Spotlight on Stars, Dies at 90
A multiple Emmy winner, he helped create sophisticated shows for the likes of Barbra Streisand, Elvis Presley, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Ben Vereen, Burt Bacharach and Bette Midler.
Read MoreChuck Mangione, Jazz Musician Known for ‘Feels So Good,’ Dies at 84
In his signature fedora, he gained wide popularity and 14 Grammy nominations, winning the award twice, while scaling Billboard’s charts in the 1970s and ’80s.
Read More8 Art Shows to See Before They Close
Radiant Rembrandts, vibrant portraiture of everyday life and uncanny photographs in New York and Boston, to catch before they’re gone, come August and September.
Read More‘Il Dono’ Review: Slow Living
A new restoration of a 2003 Italian docudrama by Michelangelo Frammartino captures the beauty and tragedy of rural life in Southern Italy.
Read MoreSarah Morlok Cotton, Quadruplet Who Knew Fame and Suffering, Dies at 95
She was the last of four sisters who became a Depression-era sensation, performing onstage. Offstage, they endured abuse and were studied for their schizophrenia.
Read MoreMourning Ozzy Osbourne in Birmingham, England, the ‘Home of Heavy Metal’
In Birmingham, England, the singer’s hometown, fans paid tribute by leaving flowers, beer and tequila. The rapper Drake was there to pay his respects, too.
Read MoreOzzy Osbourne’s Style Influenced Heavy Metal for Decades
Osbourne and Black Sabbath pioneered a horror-inspired heavy metal look that was an alternative to the colorful tie-dye of the hippies, and a prototype of things to come.
Read MoreFragmented Pieces of Painted Wall Plaster From Roman London Form a Puzzle
Archaeologists are piecing together vivid 1,800-year-old frescoes from “thousands upon thousands upon thousands” of plaster fragments, with no picture on the box to guide them.
Read More‘KPop Demon Hunters’ Directors Discuss the Film’s Rise and Chart-Topping Soundtrack
Maggie Kang, a director of the hit along with Chris Appelhans, was “just trying to make something that I wanted to see: a movie that celebrated Korean culture.”
Read MoreItaly Cancels Valery Gergiev’s Festival Appearance
Some lawmakers in Italy had argued that Valery Gergiev’s planned appearance sent the wrong message as Europe strives to remain united in its support for Ukraine.
Read MoreJohn Conklin, Who Created Fantastical Opera Sets, Dies at 88
Realizing a childhood dream, he created scenery that was highly conceptual yet playful for the Glimmerglass Festival, New York City Opera and other companies.
Read MoreRenée Fleming, Star Soprano, Tries Out the Director’s Chair
Fleming is making her directorial debut in Colorado working with young artists on Mozart’s “Così Fan Tutte,” an opera in which she appeared early in her career.
Read MorePeter Phillips, Who Was at the British Pop Art Frontier, Dies at 86
Known as the tough guy in a scene that produced David Hockney and others, he filled his paintings with gleaming car parts and sex symbols. Some of them landed on album covers.
Read More2 Books for Birthday Introspection
A novel of adolescent friendship; a brooding celebrity memoir.
Read MoreAlt Comedy Is Dead. Long Live Alt Comedy!
The term has fallen out of fashion, but the experimental spirit of the genre lives on in the refreshingly off-kilter Brent Weinbach and Eddie Pepitone.
Read MoreHow Superman Handles a Lois Lane Interview
James Gunn, the screenwriter and director of “Superman,” narrates a sequence featuring David Corenswet and Rachel Brosnahan.
Read MoreEmmy Nominees 2025: See the Complete List
The 77th Emmy Awards ceremony is planned for Sept. 14. See all the nominees below.
Read More‘The Gospel at Colonus’ Review: Singing Hallelujah on the Hudson
In an open-air revival on Little Island in Manhattan, Lee Breuer and Bob Telson’s musically sumptuous play follows Oedipus at the end of his life.
Read MoreMore Woody Guthrie Songs? Yes, From a Trove of Homemade Recordings.
A new, intimate album will include 13 previously unheard songs and a rewrite of “This Land Is Your Land.”
Read More‘The Summer I Turned Pretty,’ Plus 6 Things to Watch on TV This Week
The Prime Video show returns with its third and final season — and maybe an answer for Lola’s love triangle.
Read MoreMove Over, Mario. This Cow Is Nintendo’s New Star.
Charmed by the introduction of a cow racer for the new Mario Kart World game, fans have made her the focus of videos that are surfacing in people’s Instagram and TikTok feeds.
Read MoreBill Dilworth, Caretaker of ‘The New York Earth Room,’ Is Dead at 70
For decades, he tended a SoHo loft filled with dirt, made by the conceptual artist Walter De Maria. People made pilgrimages to see it — and Mr. Dilworth, its magnetic steward.
Read More‘The Gilded Age’ Enriches Its Portrait of Black High Society
Phylicia Rashad has joined the cast as an aristocratic matriarch. In an interview, she, Audra McDonald and Denée Benton discuss the show’s depiction of Black families.
Read MoreDave ‘Baby’ Cortez, Hitmaker Who Seemed to Vanish, Is Dead at 83
His “The Happy Organ” reached No. 1 in 1959, but his pop stardom was short-lived, and his death in 2022, with an anonymous burial, remains a source of mystery.
Read MoreJames Carter Cathcart, Voice Behind Memorable ‘Pokémon’ Characters, Dies at 71
He was known for playing Professor Oak and Meowth in the long-running franchise. He also made appearances in other popular animated series such as “Yu-Gi-Oh!” and “One Piece.”
Read MoreRonny Chieng Ponders Iran’s Threat to Kill a Sunbathing Trump
“The Daily Show” host called the threat from an Iranian official “an attack on all of America, because now we all have to picture him with his bare belly glistening in the sun.”
Read MoreJane Lazarre, Who Wrote About Motherhood and Race, Dies at 81
With books like “The Mother Knot” and “Beyond the Whiteness of Whiteness,” she challenged liberal orthodoxies about feminism and the Black experience in America.
Read MoreLate Night Is All Over Grok’s Antisemitic Posts
“Do you know how racist and antisemitic you have to be for Elon Musk to step in?” Anthony Anderson, sitting in for Jimmy Kimmel, asked rhetorically.
Read More‘Ne Zha 2,’ Blockbuster Chinese Animated Film, Will Get English Version
The English-language version will feature the voice of Michelle Yeoh and be released in the United States in August.
Read MoreSandra Neels, Eminent in Modern Dance for 60 Years, Dies at 85
She was a leading dancer for Merce Cunningham, a prolific choreographer and an admired teacher.
Read More‘Memnon’ Review: To Fight or Not to Fight?
In Will Power’s play for the Classical Theater of Harlem, Eric Berryman stars as an Ethiopian king drawn into the Trojan War.
Read MoreThe Curious Animals of Amsterdam’s Art Zoo
A new museum in a 17th-century canal house brings together fantastical taxidermy and natural history objects in an eclectic and eccentric mix.
Read MoreAs Avignon Festival Turns to Dance, It Trips Up Some Onlookers
The festival opener “Nôt,” from Marlene Monteiro Freitas, drew both boos and applause. Elsewhere, for Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, the spectacle was kept to the stage.
Read More‘Too Much,’ Plus 7 Things on TV this Week
Lena Dunham’s new rom-com comes to Netflix, and two reality shows air.
Read MoreOzzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath Play Final Shows in Birmingham, England
Heavy metal fans crossed continents to converge on Birmingham, England, and throw devil horns in honor of the Prince of Darkness and Black Sabbath.
Read MoreOzzy Osbourne Plays His ‘Final Song’ With Black Sabbath
The metal luminary, 76, took the stage with his original bandmates at a farewell festival in his Birmingham, England, hometown on Saturday night.
Read MorePaul Libin, an Enduring Force on and Off Broadway, Dies at 94
He staged a noted revival of “The Crucible” in a Manhattan hotel ballroom in 1958, ran Circle in the Square and oversaw the operations of Jujamcyn Theaters.
Read MoreJim Shooter, Editor Who ‘Saved the Comics Industry,’ Dies at 73
He brought order and profits to Marvel in the 1980s and helped establish the genre as a popular-culture tent pole for decades to come.
Read MoreOasis Starts Its World Tour With Cardiff Concert
Liam and Noel Gallagher seem ready to put aside their brotherly rivalry and play the first date of their band’s long-awaited comeback tour.
Read MoreMichael Madsen, Actor Known for ‘Reservoir Dogs’ and ‘Kill Bill,’ Dies at 67
He had the air of a timeless Hollywood heavy in movies like “Reservoir Dogs” and “Kill Bill.” “I’m a bit of a throwback to the days of black-and-white movies,” he said.
Read MoreSydney Jo Robinson’s ‘The Group Chat’ TikTok Series Returns for Season 3
Sydney Jo Robinson created the wildly popular TikTok series in March. As she gets ready to release Season 3, it has upended her entire life.
Read More100 Years After His Death, Will We Ever Understand Satie?
A century after the composer’s death, he is ubiquitous on relaxation playlists. Those just scratch the surface of a stranger, more complicated career.
Read MoreLive Updates: Sean Combs Acquitted of Sex Trafficking but Found Guilty on Lesser Charges
The music mogul celebrated after being found not guilty of sex trafficking and racketeering conspiracy. He was convicted of transporting people for prostitution and could be released on bond.
Read MoreNeil Sedaka Executed One of Pop’s Great Comebacks. Now, He Just Plays.
At 86, the singer and songwriter is seeing his albums reissued as he occasionally takes the stage to celebrate his decades-old resurrection.
Read MoreWhat to Know About Bob Vylan, the Band at the Center of a Scandal
British police are investigating and the band lost its U.S. visas after a member called for “death” to Israel’s army at a festival.
Read MoreHow Lisa Laurén’s Artsy Childhood Inspires Her Sought-After Animal Heads
A sought-after textile artist applies a can-do spirit from her artsy childhood in a Swedish commune to creating animal costume heads for performers. They cost from $2,500 to $3,500.
Read MoreDate Everything! From the Comfort of Your Anthropomorphic Home
FBC: Firebreak, a co-op shooter by the studio behind Control, underwhelms in every way. Rooftops & Alleys celebrates parkour with fluid animations and intricate combos.
Read More‘Tour de France: Unchained,’ Plus 9 Things to Watch on TV this Week
Netflix airs the documentary series on the bike race and various networks release shark stories.
Read MoreBeyoncé Pauses Houston Concert After Car Prop Malfunction Left Her Dangling Over Crowds
She was singing “16 Carriages,” as she sat in the back of a red convertible prop high above the crowds on Saturday, when it suddenly slanted in the air.
Read MoreAudience Report: Celebrating 50 Years of ‘Jaws’ on Martha’s Vineyard
The anniversary festivities included V.I.P. meet-and-greets, book signings, film screenings and lectures about sharks. But for many, the real draw was the island itself.
Read MoreLACMA Opens the Doors to Its New Building
The museum invited the public for a preview of its new David Geffen Galleries spanning Wilshire Boulevard — before the art moves in next year.
Read MoreDiana Oh, Passionate Voice for Queer Liberation in Theater, Dies at 38
Mx. Oh’s politically provocative and often playful works, including the Off Broadway production “{my lingerie play},” asserted the right to be oneself while having fun.
Read MoreSean Combs Trial Live Updates: Defense Tries to Dismantle Arson, Kidnapping and Bribery Accusations
In his closing argument, Marc Agnifilo questioned the credibility of witnesses and asked jurors whether they also felt kidnapped because they were stuck in court for long hours.
Read MoreLéon Krier, Architect Whose Classical Work Won a Royal Ally, Dies at 79
Although many of his designs remain unbuilt — with a few exceptions, including King Charles’s Poundbury — he was a driving force in the New Urbanism movement.
Read MoreSean Combs Trial Live Updates: Arson, Kidnapping and Drug Allegations Are Presented to Jurors
The prosecution began its closing argument by focusing on a racketeering charge, describing what they say was a criminal enterprise involving personal assistants and security guards.
Read More‘Lowcountry’ Review: A Flat-Footed First Date
Abby Rosebrock’s latest offering for Atlantic Theater Company mines fertile ground, but simmers about with nary a sign of tension, sexual or otherwise.
Read MoreFinding Yourselves in The Alters, a Glorious Sci-Fi Adventure
The Alters is an extraordinary survival game that explores miscommunication, human fallibility and conflicting motivations.
Read MoreNever Quitting ‘Brokeback Mountain’
Now 20 years old, this love story about two sheepherders is being rereleased in theaters. Here’s a look at what it meant to pop culture, then and now.
Read MorePusha T and Malice Reunite as Clipse, With Vengeance on Their Minds
The duo of brothers known for rapping with single-minded focus is returning with “Let God Sort Em Out,” its first studio album since 2009.
Read MoreWith Broadway Tunes, Democrats Protest Trump’s Takeover of Kennedy Center
The small concert hosted by five senators during Pride Month was directed by the lead producer of “Hamilton.” An altered set of “Les Misérables” lyrics poked at the president.
Read MoreArnaldo Pomodoro, 98, Sculptor of Monumental Fractured Spheres, Dies
His bronze works — smooth-skinned orbs slashed to reveal complex cores — are in public places around the world, including outside the U.N. headquarters and in Vatican City.
Read MoreRod Nordland, 75, Dies; War Reporter Who Also Wrote of His Own Struggle
Motivated by the helplessness of his boyhood, he described the lives of vulnerable people in conflicts around the world and later his own terminal illness.
Read MoreWhat Does Shane Gillis Want (to Get Away With)?
Gillis built a bro-comedy fan base and endured a quasi cancellation. With his Netflix sitcom “Tires,” he’s trying to map the leap from edgelord to the mainstream.
Read MoreDr. Demento Announces His Retirement After 55 Years on the Air
Barry Hansen, mostly known by his D.J. name, said he’d end his show’s run after 55 years of playing parody songs. His syndicated show was once heard on more than 150 radio stations.
Read MoreLou Christie, ‘Lightnin’ Strikes’ Pop Crooner, Is Dead at 82
A late-1960s throwback to the days of clean-cut teen idols — he called himself “the missing link” — he rode his gymnastic vocal range to a string of hits.
Read MoreGunilla Knutson, Star of ‘Take It Off’ Shaving Cream Ads, Dies at 84
A model who was crowned Miss Sweden in 1961, she became best known for commercials that one observer said “replaced the ‘hard sell’ with the ‘sex sell.’”
Read MoreFive Free Movies to Stream Now
Films including “Jodorowsky’s Dune” and Owen Kline’s “Funny Pages” delve into the pain and anguish — and brief ecstasy — of making art.
Read More‘And Just Like That …’ Season 3, Episode 4 Recap: Guilty
Aidan says he invited Carrie to stay with him longer in Virginia because he felt guilty. But is that really true?
Read More‘28 Years Later’ Review: Danny Boyle Revives His Monsters
The director returns to the postapocalyptic Britain he conjured in his 2002 movie “28 Days Later,” this time with a father and son running from the infected. Mom joins in, too.
Read MoreIn ‘Lash,’ Rebecca Saunders’s First Opera, Sex Flirts With Death
Rebecca Saunders has collaborated with the artist Ed Atkins to create “Lash,” a work that hovers around themes of illness and intimacy.
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‘The Life of Chuck’ | Anatomy of a Scene
“I’m Mike Flanagan. I am the screenwriter, the director, the editor, and one of the producers for “The Life of Chuck.” So we’re seeing Chiwetel Ejiofor, who plays Marty Anderson. He’s walking right now to his ex-wife’s house in the middle of the end of the world. At this point in the story, and this […]
Read MoreReview: He’s Here, He’s Queer, He’s the Future King of England
The Off Broadway play “Prince Faggot” aims to shock. But the real surprise is how good it is anyway.
Read MoreFIFA Struts Off the Pitch and Onto the Catwalk
Soccer’s governing body is putting its name on a luxury fashion line. Would you buy it?
Read MoreBeuford Smith, Photographer Who Chronicled Black Life, Dies at 89
He was a prominent member of the Kamoinge Workshop, a collective that nurtured Black photographers at a time when they were marginalized by the mainstream.
Read More‘The Survivors’ Is a Polished and Potent Murder Mystery
Based on the book by Jane Harper, this six-part Australian drama takes place in a coastal Tasmanian town, where the bodies keep surfacing.
Read More‘Tacos de Lengua’ Review: Finding the Rhythm of the Night
At the Chocolate Factory Theater in Queens on Friday, Martita Abril’s performance expressed life on the border from multiple angles.
Read MoreCeline Song’s New Rom-Com ‘Materialists’ Takes a Deep Look at Love and Value
Celine Song’s new “Materialists” takes a deep look at love and value via a rom-com, a genre that she argues is wrongfully dismissed: “What is more important than love?”
Read MoreFoday Musa Suso, 75, Dies; Ambitious Ambassador for West African Music
A master of the kora who worked with Herbie Hancock and Philip Glass, his career was powered as much by experimentation as by reverence for tradition.
Read More2 Men Are Sentenced in Theft of Golden Toilet
The men were sentenced to two to four years for their roles in the 2019 theft of an 18-carat artwork at Winston Churchill’s ancestral home.
Read MoreAnanda Lewis, an MTV Star in the 1990s, Dies at 52
She rose to fame on “Hot Zone” and other shows before being diagnosed with breast cancer in 2019. She said last year that her cancer had progressed to Stage 4.
Read MoreBrian Wilson Wrote the California Dream, but He Didn’t Live It
An artist nearly synonymous with Los Angeles made his name crafting songs playing up his home state’s beachy vibes. His inner life, however, was anything but sunny.
Read MoreBrian Wilson and Beach Boys’ Style Showed What California Living Looked Like
In Pendleton shirts and khakis, Mr. Wilson and the Beach Boys showed the world what easy Southern California living looked like.
Read MorePaul McCartney, Carole King and Others Pay Tribute to Brian Wilson
Wilson, whose death was announced on Wednesday, leaves behind an immense musical legacy that spans several decades. King and others share how his music shaped them.
Read MoreSly Stone and the Sound of an America That Couldn’t Last
The influential musician, who died on Monday at 82, forged harmony — musical and otherwise — that he wasn’t able to hold together on his own.
Read MoreBroadway Dreams Were Dashed, Then Rob Madge Knocked on Some Doors
The British performer is bringing “My Son’s a Queer (but What Can You Do?)” to City Center this week, after an earlier run was canceled.
Read MoreNiede Guidon, 92, Archaeologist Who Preserved Prehistoric Rock Art, Dies
Her work in Brazil challenged the prevailing theory of when humans first arrived in the Americas and led to the development of a forgotten corner of the country.
Read MoreSly Stone, Maestro of a Multifaceted Hitmaking Band, Dies at 82
Leading Sly and the Family Stone, he helped redefine the landscape of pop, funk and rock in the late 1960s and early ’70s.
Read MoreFrederick Forsyth, Master of the Geopolitical Thriller, Dies at 86
He wrote best-sellers like “The Day of the Jackal” and “The Dogs of War,” often using material from his earlier life as a reporter and spy.
Read More‘Sunset Boulevard’ Starring Nicole Scherzinger Wins the Tony Award for Best Musical Revival
The high-tech production of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s musical proved to be a star vehicle for the pop singer.
Read More2025 Tony Awards: ‘Maybe Happy Ending’ Named Best Musical, While Nicole Scherzinger Wins Top Acting Honors
Darren Criss, Cole Escola and Sarah Snook were among those honored in Broadway’s foremost awards show, while the original cast of “Hamilton” reunited for a performance.
Read MoreMisty Copeland Broke a Ballet Barrier and Became a Star
Copeland, the first Black female principal at American Ballet Theater, has announced she’s retiring. She made history, and then made it count.
Read MoreThe Director of ‘Mission Impossible: Final Reckoning’ Unpacks Key Franchise Moments
The filmmaker Christopher McQuarrie discusses major character deaths, the end (or is it?) of an action-movie franchise and what comes next.
Read MoreRoger Nichols, Songwriter Behind Carpenters Hits, Dies at 84
With Paul Williams, he wrote enduring 1970s soft-rock classics like “We’ve Only Just Begun” and “Rainy Days and Mondays.”
Read MoreJillian Sackler, Philanthropist Who Defended Husband’s Legacy, Dies at 84
Though the Sackler name was tarnished over Purdue Pharma’s role in the opioid crisis, Arthur Sackler’s should not be, she insisted; a company founder, he died well before the trouble began.
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