Arts
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Everyone Knows Sutton Foster Can Sing. Now We Know She Can Juggle.
There’s busy, and then there’s bonkers. Sutton Foster, one of musical theater’s most celebrated performers, had already committed to starring…
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The Met Aims to Get Harlem Right, the Second Time Around
Notoriously, in the winter of 1969 the Metropolitan Museum of Art opened its first exhibition devoted to African American culture,…
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Where the New Ye Meets the Old Kanye
“Vultures 1,” the rapper’s album with Ty Dolla Sign, arrived on the 20th anniversary of his debut, “The College Dropout.”
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If You Liked ‘Saltburn,’ Consider This Much Better Movie
“The Dreamers,” Bernardo Bertolucci’s notorious 2004 coming-of-age drama, pushes the same buttons, but it makes serious points along the way.
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‘Oppenheimer’ Sweeps the BAFTAs With 7 Awards Including Best Film
“The Holdovers” and “Poor Things” were also honored at the British equivalent of the Oscars, while “Saltburn” and “Barbie” left…
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The Artist Whose Oct. 7 Series ‘Attracts Fire’
Seismic world events in Ukraine and the Middle East draw Zoya Cherkassky’s highly personal responses. “There was nothing to be…
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36 Authors Times ‘Fourteen Days’ Adds Up to a Mixed Literary Experiment
In this collaboratively written novel, Lower East Side dwellers get through lockdown swapping colorful tales on the roof of their…
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A Celebrity Dies, and New Biographies Pop Up Overnight. The Author? A.I.
Books — often riddled with gross grammatical and factual errors — are appearing for sale online soon after the death…
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With ‘Gems’ From Black Collections, the Harlem Renaissance Reappears
How do you measure the United States in the 20th century without Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Louis Armstrong and…
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Six Artists Reflect on the Legacy of the Harlem Renaissance
A century later, the first African American modernist movement continues to inspire and challenge.