|
Several promising titles are coming this month, including a new series starring Rachel Weisz and the feature-length sequel to "Peaky Blinders."
| RELATED ARTICLES | | |
|
Some of the president's supporters are raging after Marco Rubio said the quiet part out loud about the war against Iran
|
|
The Justice Department lawsuit says the concert giant acts as a monopoly in the music industry, a charge the company denies.
|
|
The National Capital Planning Commission received about 32,000 messages during its public comment period. Suffice it to say: Many people are not happy with the president's ballroom plans.
| RELATED ARTICLES | | |
|
The DOJ has accused the live-entertainment giant of wielding outsized control over the industry, but the company's lawyers claim it "did not have monopoly power" during opening statements
|
|
"Swim" will serve as the title track and the anthemic "Into the Sun" will close out the album, which drops March 20
|
|
Besides "Dorothea," of course.
|
|
The Tony-winning musical welcomes a new set of leading players to the Walter Kerr Theatre March 3.
|
|
Even a performance cancellation can't stop one of Broadway's newest plays from being a top grosser.
|
|
Nick Ut, the freelancer long credited for the award-winning photo from the Vietnam War, says a Netflix documentary questioning his work has defamed him.
|
|
The annual luncheon ceremony, recognizing work playing Broadway and Off-Broadway, will be held May 15.
|
|
Gomez says the superstar singer also wrote an unreleased track titled "Family," which is about their friendship and early dreams about their careers
|
|
The festival's Friday headliner Richard Ashcroft will take to the stage early so fans can watch the Scotland v Morocco game.
|
|
The American Dance Machine revue features reconstructions from West Side Story, White Christmas, Singin' in the Rain, and more.
|
|
In the stage versions of two beloved books, the most impressive moments emerge when the productions stray from the source material.
|
|
The Oscar nominee Autumn Durald Arkapaw's ambitious collaboration with Ryan Coogler was also risky, starting with the very heavy large-format cameras.
|
|
He covered Philadelphia with more than 50,000 square feet of madcap mosaics, showcasing his work at the Magic Gardens Museum.
|
|
The Denver-based folk group, riding a steady buzz built from energetic concerts, show what they can do in the studio on Sin & Squalor
|
|
"I can't believe our bombs are now smarter than our president," the Daily Show host said.
| RELATED ARTICLES | | |
|
Previously known as the SAG Awards, the honors have rebranded for 2026.
| RELATED ARTICLES | | |
|
Finnian Garbutt says on social media that scans have shown cancer has "progressed rapidly" in his body.
|
|
A jury will decide whether the music colossus, which owns venues, represents artists and operates Ticketmaster, is a monopoly, as the Justice Department contends.
|
|
"This ride has been unbelievable," he said of being part of Ryan Coogler's Southern vampire movie Sinners
|
|
The punk legends will return to the road in September after a wrist injury to guitarist Steve Jones forced them to postpone their 2025 trek
|
|
The vampire drama was named outstanding cast and, in an upset, its star won best lead actor. Other victors included Catherine O'Hara for "The Studio."
|
|
The musical is the newest project by Hunter Bird, one of the creative minds behind Off-Broadway's immersive Masquerade.
|
|
Opens Wednesday, Nov 23, 2022
Movie Details Play Trailers
|
|
A former aide in the Trump White House shared a story about the time a colleague warned her that playing Taylor Swift in Trumpland was potentially a fireable offense.
|
|
Fans of the popular South Korean boy band BTS matched its $1 million donation to Black Lives Matter (BLM) in support of U.S. protests against police brutality, an organisation that runs fundraisers for the fans said on Monday.
|
|
When political times are bad, humor is often the only remedy. Stephen Colbert tries to help here with an animated parody of President Donald Trump, his family and staff- first seen in small segments on his "Late Show" but expanded to a half-hour series for Showtime (where there's much less content restriction.) Everyone, on both political sides, is depicted here as caricatures as you'd see in newspaper political cartoons- Trump with an orange face and obviously fake hair, his wife Melania looking and talking a bit like "Natasha" from Rocky and Bullwinkle, daughter Ivanka as a stereotypical "valley girl" and (now-former) Attorney General Jeff Sessions oddly as a small gnome-like being, to name just a few. Each episode is given a loose plot that seems to exist mainly just to support the jokes the wri...Read the entire review
|
|