Books
-
Best of Late Night 2022: A Rebuilding Year
After a year of significant change, as hosts like Trevor Noah and Samantha Bee signed off, the future of late-night…
-
Review: In ‘Between Riverside and Crazy,’ Real Estate Gets Real
Stephen Adly Guirgis’s 2014 play finally comes to Broadway, its hilarious, loving and unvarnished vision of the universal human hustle…
-
Getting Close to Sondheim: New Books Try to Capture His Essence
Memoirs by his collaborators are among the works available now, and several others are on the horizon.
-
New Broadway Labor Agreement Includes Pandemic-Prompted Changes
The deal, ratified by members of Actors’ Equity, provides salary increases for performers and stage managers, and allows producers to…
-
Musical Adaptation of ‘Almost Famous’ Will Close on Broadway
The show, a passion project for Cameron Crowe, opened on Broadway in early November, but has faced soft sales in…
-
Amber Heard Says She Has Decided to ‘Settle’ Johnny Depp Defamation Case
The long-running legal battle was heading for its next chapter in an appeals court, but Ms. Heard said she wished…
-
The Best Genre Movies of 2022
We look at the best in horror, science fiction, action and international films, all available to stream.
-
Review: ‘The Magic Flute’ Directs Its Whimsy Toward the Younger Set
Julie Taymor’s version of Mozart’s opera, a fairy tale of puppets and plexiglass, achieves its finest form in the Met’s…
-
‘Des Moines’ Review: Drowning in the Drink
A new production of Denis Johnson’s final play showcases many of his signatures: deadpan absurdism, misfit characters, heavy drinking and…
-
What ‘Harry & Meghan’ Still Doesn’t Say About Race
Meghan Markle could have been a symbolic ambassador for the monarchy, particularly for people of color. But what would that…