The E Street Band opened its Land of Hope and Dreams tour on Tuesday night, where the musician asked the crowd to choose “unity over division and peace over war.” Read more ...
The E Street Band opened its Land of Hope and Dreams tour on Tuesday night, where the musician asked the crowd to choose “unity over division and peace over war.” Read more ...
The creators of a new “Tristan und Isolde” production explain the influences behind every element of a crucial scene. Read more ...
On TikTok and Instagram, content creators play detective, trying to figure out what work has been done. But they’re really just critiquing women’s looks. Read more ...
The visual historian and celebrated author of “Low Life” has two shows of recent artwork made from decades of gathering materials, a trove she slices and glues. Read more ...
A new Jonathan Glatzer tech satire and an adaptation of Isabel Allende’s novel “The House of the Spirits” are among this month’s highlights. Read more ...
Jennifer Tilly and Daphne Rubin-Vega in “The Adding Machine,” plus Jane Fonda in an eco-musical and Cecily Strong and Corey Stoll as a couple on their first date. Read more ...
The Emancipation Proclamation and the 19th Amendment have been added to the Archives’s rotunda, the first permanent changes there in nearly 75 years. Read more ...
The social media giant, under legal pressure from the Motion Picture Association, has retreated from its use of the movie rating in its marketing. Read more ...
The taboo-busting, gasp-inducing Broadway musical comedy has been a hit with audiences and critics. But could it be produced today? Read more ...
Books by Marie NDiaye, Daniel Kehlmann and Rene Karabash are among the shortlisted titles for the major award for fiction translated into English. Read more ...
Feldman, born a century ago this year, wrote quietly sensual and humanist works in an age of structural rigor. Read more ...
Joe Mantello’s Broadway revival, starring Nathan Lane and Laurie Metcalf, was inspired by a draft with notes by Arthur Miller. Here are some of them. Read more ...
Dion, who has rarely performed since announcing her stiff person syndrome diagnosis in 2022, will put on 10 shows beginning in September. Read more ...
The Upper West Side performing arts venue will take its programming across the city while its doors close for a 15-month overhaul. Read more ...
Will the newly announced “connection” between the co-stars West Wilson and Amanda Batula become Scandoval 2.0? Read more ...
Hubbard Street Dance Chicago and the Off Broadway revue “Gotta Dance!” shine a light on repertory that is too often overlooked. Read more ...
New shows of note this month include a new season of “Beef” and an animated “Stranger Things” spinoff. Read more ...
Her sculpted figurines were hailed as exemplars of folk art, drawing a Rockefeller’s admiration. She continued her artistry even after losing her eyesight. Read more ...
The rapper was rushed to the hospital midway through a performance of “Moulin Rouge! The Musical” on Tuesday. She is expected to return to the show on Thursday. Read more ...
Two Shakespeare adaptations — Teatro La Plaza’s uplifting remix and Red Bull Theater’s gore fest — place very different values on human existence. Read more ...
Two principal dancers will say farewell in the 2026-27 season, which features the revival of Balanchine’s “Pithoprakta” and Alexei Ratmansky’s “Romeo and Juliet.” Read more ...
The sincerity of the play’s two stars shines through in Robert Icke’s new London production. Read more ...
At the Museum of Modern Art through April 7, audiences can enter and exit a screening of the 6½-hour film, which Jacobs began in the 1950s. Read more ...
This month brings Barry Manilow and Martha Graham, Earth Day and Easter, as well as a pickle tour and a little night music. Read more ...
These single-serving satires, family dramas and romances can be read cover-to-cover in one sun-dappled afternoon. Read more ...
The “Late Show” host joked that “Trump attacked Iran” after ABC scrapped the reality show’s latest season. Read more ...
A Russian-born director, he created a film about New Wave models and killer aliens in 1980s New York, helping to reshape independent filmmaking in America. Read more ...
Lynch Fragments, a series of abstract steel sculptures he created starting in 1963, evoked the long, devastating history of violence against Black Americans. Read more ...
The sequel to the mega-blockbuster can’t hold still long enough to let us enjoy the good stuff. Read more ...
With TV soundtracks increasingly turning to nostalgic ’80s tracks, hear a playlist of essential hits and deeper cuts. Read more ...
The competition will bring together singers representing 10 nations including South Korea, the Philippines and Vietnam. Read more ...
In this month’s picks, reflections on a comedian couple, a charged reality-TV series and activism in Northern Ireland. Read more ...
Raye, Olivia Dean, Lola Young and PinkPantheress are making a big impact on the charts and in pop culture, foregrounding their Englishness rather than adapting it. Read more ...
“Just look at the crowd we got here in New York,” he said. “Oop, that’s the T.S.A. line at J.F.K.” Read more ...
A raucous adaptation of a gritty portrait of New York stifles tension with comedy, leaving its stars, Jon Bernthal and Ebon Moss-Bachrach, adrift. Read more ...
He created dances performed worldwide, and, under his leadership, the Houston Ballet grew into one of America’s largest and most prominent troupes. Read more ...
She elevated supporting film roles with insight and improvisational skill, a talent she took to Broadway, earning Tony nominations. Read more ...
An experimental theater veteran, he collected the ephemera of his friends and colleagues. As they began to die, he made shrines honoring them. Read more ...
One of two New York premieres at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, “Via Dolorosa” seeks truth in plainness. Read more ...
Thieves broke into the Magnani-Rocca Foundation outside Parma, Italy, officials said, and made off with pieces worth millions. Read more ...
In her “Trilogy of Funerals,” the Spanish provocateur Angélica Liddell shows a sense of vulnerability that will surprise longtime watchers of her work. Read more ...
Starting in May, Hargitay will make her Broadway debut in “Every Brilliant Thing,” an elastic play that shape shifts to fit a distinctly different star. Read more ...
As a new commercial era of space exploration accelerates, scientists are considering the physical culture of outer space. Dancers are well positioned to help. Read more ...
The actress has gotten used to dispensing advice, including on this Hulu drama and in a new self-help memoir. Read more ...
Eddie Murphy, Snoop Dogg and Bill Clinton (naturally) show up in his gossipy new memoir. He isn’t very sentimental. Read more ...
Novels by Emma Straub, Ben Lerner and TJ Klune; nonfiction by Patrick Radden Keefe and Lena Dunham; a road trip history of the United States; and more. Read more ...
Super Mario Bros. and Minecraft became movie blockbusters, and Call of Duty and Legend of Zelda adaptations are on the way. Fans of the video games are watching closely. Read more ...
A new iteration of the Bravo franchise begins and the second season of “Your Friends & Neighbors” premieres. Read more ...
Valerie doesn’t fully understand why people in Hollywood are so worked up about A.I. She just sees a wave she thinks she knows how to ride. Read more ...
Trained as a playwright, he got his first TV writing job on “St. Elsewhere,” then worked on “Homicide: Life on the Street,” “The Wire,” “Treme” and “Bosch.” Read more ...
Rocky was brought to life through a combination of puppetry and visual effects. But his charming personality was the result of a misunderstanding. Read more ...
One hundred years after it was banned for its depiction of hedonism, the rhythmic, jazz-soaked poetry of Joseph Moncure March continues to find new life. Read more ...
Before being cast as “The Bachelorette,” Taylor Frankie Paul had discussed — with police, on podcasts and on TV — the domestic dispute that involved her 5-year-old daughter. Read more ...
Paul Troubetzkoy traveled the world to immortalize the A-listers of his time. An exhibition in Milan remembers his vitality and fame. Read more ...
After a stretch of cold weather, the Culture of Bathe-ing Festival’s waterfront gathering brought out the swimsuits and a different kind of chill. Read more ...
Paul McCartney previews his first solo album in six years, and the Swedish pop star Robyn returns after eight with “Sexistential.” Read more ...
Admired by a new generation including Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon and Vampire Weekend’s Ezra Koenig, his new album, “Indigo Park,” keeps pushing forward. Read more ...
The genre-crossing bassist returning with his first album in six years broke down highlights from his collections of comic books, fashion and more. Read more ...
Shows from Amy Poehler, the novelist John Green and the Irish poet Pádraig Ó Tuama will help you take a break from the doomscrolling. Read more ...
Jon Bernthal and Ebon Moss-Bachrach are both making their Broadway debut in a high-stakes adaptation of the beloved 1975 film “Dog Day Afternoon.” Read more ...
Her best-selling series, about four children who live in a train car and solve mysteries, inspired sequels, spinoffs and animated films. Read more ...
The pair joined in a gathering of artists and others who denounced censorship and faulted President Trump’s growing influence over the nation’s cultural life. Read more ...
The decision by the company, one of the most prestigious in the country, is the latest in a wave of high-profile cancellations at the center. Read more ...