Belarus Free Theater’s “KS6: Small Forward” and three other shows are reminders that there are many ways to portray conflicts and confrontations onstage. Source link
Read More »Nick Gravenites, Mainstay of the San Francisco Rock Scene, Dies at 85
A blues devotee from Chicago, he tasted fame in the late 1960s with the Electric Flag, a band that made its debut at Monterey but proved short-lived. Source link
Read More »7 New Books We Recommend This Week
Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times. Source link
Read More »An Exclusive Look at the Met’s Reimagined Rockefeller Wing
With more than 1,800 works from five continents, and new scholarship, refreshed galleries present the arts of Africa, the Ancient Americas and Oceania as three distinct areas. Source link
Read More »Holy Hollywood! Batman Is the First Superhero With a Walk of Fame Star.
The caped crusader, who debuted in 1939, joins other illustrious figures — including Adam West, the actor who played him on TV. Source link
Read More »‘Freaks and Geeks’ at 25: ‘It Was Slipping Away the Entire Time’
The beloved high-school sitcom debuted in September 1999 and lasted one season. Paul Feig, Judd Apatow and others look back on the show’s birth, death and long afterlife. Source link
Read More »How ‘Discoshow’ Spun Las Vegas Into Funkytown
Revisiting 1970s New York, a new theatrical experience is one history lesson that’s all about the good times. Source link
Read More »What to See on the West End This Fall
Some recommendations for visitors and residents who want to get the most from the city’s varied theater scene. Source link
Read More »‘Killer Heat’ Review: Mediterranean Mischief
Joseph Gordon-Levitt plays a detective running from his past in a murder mystery that is mostly a stiff slog to get through. Source link
Read More »‘Lee’ Review: A Remarkable Life at War
Kate Winslet embodies the tenacity of the photographer Lee Miller, who documented World War II for British Vogue. Source link
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