Books
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‘Do What Moves You’: When the Student Takes Over as Composer
After years of friendship and collaboration, Aaron Marcellus is writing the music for a new dance by Michelle Dorrance, his…
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‘The Brightest Thing in the World’ Review: Falling in Love, While Loving Heroin
An addiction and recovery tale wrapped in a romantic comedy, Leah Nanako Winkler’s play insists on acknowledging the messy coexistence…
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The Met Takes a Deep Dive Into van Gogh’s Cypress Trees
Forty landmark paintings and drawings by the Dutch master include “The Starry Night” — on loan from MoMA — and…
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The Joyce Announces a Diverse Spring Season
The 16 weeks of programming will feature new and returning dance companies from the United States and around the world.
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Natural History Museum Names College Leader as New Chief
Sean M. Decatur, the president of Kenyon College and a biophysical chemist, will become the museum’s first Black leader when…
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‘Stomp’ to Close in New York in January
The long-running stage show has been a part of the city’s theatrical landscape for nearly 29 years.
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No John, No George, No Ringo, but Still a Lot to Say
“The McCartney Legacy” follows the superstar from the last gasp of the Beatles to “Band on the Run.” It’s 700…
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In ‘Willow,’ Warwick Davis Revives the ‘Role That Gave Me Everything’
The 1988 film “Willow” turned Davis into a “proper actor,” he said, and changed his life. A new series on…
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Sleigh Bells Ring, Everyone’s Streaming: Christmas Music Is Back
Grabbing a piece of the lucrative holiday market requires planning, luck and the occasional battle with a seasoned superstar like…
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Review: ‘The Far Country’ Brings a Neglected History Closer
Early 20th-century San Francisco and Guangdong, China, overlap in Lloyd Suh’s artful examination of the emotional price of immigration.