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NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

Olivia Rodrigo's ‘Drop Dead' Is a Heavenly Fakeout
The first taste of the pop star's third album isn't a bloodthirsty kiss-off, but a dreamy ode to losing herself in love.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

The Choreographer Kyle Abraham Embraces the Big Perm and Boombox Era
His "Cassette Vol. 1" has a 1980s mix tape soundtrack and nods to postmodern American dance vocabulary.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

9 Shows Our Theater Critics Are Talking About
John Lithgow in "Giant," a triumphant revival of "Death of a Salesman" and vogueing cats at "The Jellicle Ball": These productions are worth knowing about.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

‘Thrash' and Other Action Movies to Stream Now
This month's picks include killer sharks, unlikely gangsters, and defiant ballerinas.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

Is the Movie Star Back? Sort Of.
Box office earnings seem no longer won by name alone. From "Project Hail Mary" to "F1," celebrities are campaigning overtime on screens large and small to lead to hits.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

Metropolitan Opera and MoMA Together Put Kahlo at Center Stage
In an unusual collaboration for the Met, the opera's set designer has conceived a companion exhibition, mounted at MoMA.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

Recalling When Lower Manhattan Was New Amsterdam
An exhibition at the New York Historical focuses on the city's 17th-century roots as a Dutch settlement.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

At the Guggenheim, Pop Art Engages With Art of the Present
An exhibition explores examples of Pop Art from the 1960s in dialogue with recent acquisitions by contemporary artists.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

The Phillies Owner and His Wife Collect Art's Heavy Hitters
Mets fans, avert your eyes: John Middleton, majority owner of the Phillies, and his wife have a deep bench of American art stars, and they've lent them in a dual display for the 250th.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

9 New Movies Our Critics Are Talking About This Week
Whether you're a casual moviegoer or an avid buff, our reviewers think these films are worth knowing about.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

Five Free Movies to Stream Now
This month's picks make up a quintet of paranoia that speaks to the ethos of unease and dread endemic to the modern moment

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

‘Lee Cronin's The Mummy' Is Out. Wait, Who's Lee Cronin?
The latest take on Universal's "Mummy" franchise has a director you may not know. We explain who he is, why his name is in the movie title and what he brings to the "Mummy" world.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

How TV Series Like ‘Smash' and ‘American Classic' Portray Theater Is Quite a Drama
As portrayed in shows like "Smash," "Slings & Arrows" and "American Classic," life onstage is a grab-bag of archetypes both hilariously wrong and a little bit right.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

‘Everyone Is Lying to You for Money' Digs Into Cryptocurrency
"Everyone Is Lying to You for Money," directed by Ben McKenzie, gives a solid introduction to virtual currency, and its traps.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

Pragmata Is a ‘Sad Dad' Game Without the Emotional Bond
Pragmata features a grizzled soldier and a robot child but doesn't have the emotional bond of The Last of Us or The Walking Dead.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

A New ‘Sad Dad' Game Fails to Make Its Ancestors Proud
Pragmata features a grizzled soldier and a robot child but doesn't have the emotional bond of The Last of Us or The Walking Dead.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

How the D4vd Case and Rumors Captivated the Public Before the Singer's Arrest
A teenage girl went missing. The police found her remains in a musician's car. Then the Los Angeles media machine got to work.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

The Lurid D4vd Case and the Fervid Hunt for Details
A teenage girl went missing. The police found her remains in a musician's car. Then the Los Angeles media machine got to work.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

Through A.I. Glasses-Powered Translation, Korea's Theaters Hope for a K-Pop Moment
Producers and the cultural authorities hope that technology can overcome a language barrier and take the country's shows to the world.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 17, 2026

Stephen Colbert Delights in Trump's ‘Ongoing Papal Feud'
The host of "The Late Show" recapped what he called "yet another day when the entire world is on edge over President Trump's senseless and elective war — with the pope."

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘The Pitt' Season 2 Finale Recap: Jagged Little Pills
For all the death and darkness the Pitt crew had to swallow this season, finale also offered profound moments of hope and renewal.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

D4vd Arrested in Connection With Death of Celeste Rivas Hernandez
The singer was detained in connection with the death of Celeste Rivas Hernandez, who died before her 15th birthday. D4vd's lawyers said they would vigorously defend his innocence.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘Proof' Review: Ayo Edebiri as a Math Girl, Interrupted
The actress stars as a haunted genius opposite Don Cheadle as her father in David Auburn's 2001 drama. This revival, though, exposes the play's lack of rigor.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

Pittsburgh's Children's Museum Satisfies a Hunger for Eric Carle
The institution will feature five of the beloved author's collage-based books in a series of interactive exhibits meant to engage children.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

A ‘Cabinet of Wonders' on Show at the American Academy of Arts and Letters
Current members of the museum have created a show that draws from, and comments on, the institution's curious collections.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

In Its ‘Greater New York' Show, MoMA PS1 Focuses on the Here and Now
Even as the institution has grown and changed, it has continued to be a launchpad for emerging artists. This spring, it is putting 53 in the spotlight.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

Coming to Broadway: Molière, ‘The Full Monty' and a Play About D.J.s
Roundabout Theater Company, one of the four nonprofits with Broadway houses, plans three Broadway shows next season.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

Luke Tennie's Journey From ‘Shrinking' to ‘The Pitt' and Beyond
After a breakout performance on "Shrinking," the actor can now be seen on "Abbott Elementary" and "The Pitt."

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

What We Lose When Everything Is ‘-Coded'
On the social internet, our fascination with analyzing the hidden messages in our culture has been flattened into one word.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

A Thomas J Price Bronze Opens Door to London's V&A East
Thomas J Price's bronze figures present anonymous Black people at heroic scale. After an installation in Times Square sparked a furor, his latest work welcomes visitors to a new museum outpost.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest' Returns With Contemporary Bite
A new London production highlights the story's racial element and shows how much has changed since the play's 1963 premiere.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

A Sculptor's Life, in Constant Motion
A career-spanning Alexander Calder exhibition in Paris turns the viewer into a collaborator and lifts the soul.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘Lee Cronin's The Mummy' Review: Fresh From the Sarcophagus
The movie revives one of cinema's unforgettable monsters with a macabre makeover, but it spins out in the attempt.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘Greater New York' Brings the Noisy, Messy Vitality of 53 Artists
The signature survey by MoMA PS 1 of artists living and working in the city highlights those whose talent is often hidden in plain sight.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

The Phillies Owner's Other Superstars
Mets fans, avert your eyes: John Middleton, majority owner of the Phillies, and his wife have a deep bench of American art stars, and they've lent them in a dual display for the 250th.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

Kenya Barris on His New Documentary, ‘Jerry West: The Logo'
A new documentary by the "Black-ish" creator Kenya Barris looks at the legacy of Jerry West, a figure so crucial to the N.B.A.'s history that he's the league's logo.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

After ‘Shrinking,' Luke Tennie Is Staying Booked and Busy
After a breakout performance on "Shrinking," the actor can now be seen on "Abbott Elementary" and "The Pitt."

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

It's (Always) the Season for Anime
There's a new crop four times a year. This spring, the Ghibli-like "Witch Hat Atelier" and the alternate-future samurai saga "Nippon Sangoku" stand out.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘Mother Mary' Review: Anne Hathaway Strikes a Pose
The actress plays a pop star who reunites with Michaela Coel's fashion designer. But the spectacle you see onscreen is far more engaging than the dialogue.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘Normal' Review: This Town Is Anything But
Bob Odenkirk plays a sheriff who uncovers a dangerous secret in this hyper-violent, small-town crime caper.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘Mad Bills to Pay' Review: Growing Up Unexpectedly
A girlfriend's pregnancy upends the life of a young man in the Bronx in this first feature by Joel Alfonso Vargas that unspools with sedulous care.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘Erupcja' Review: Dancing Through the Ash
Charli XCX stars in this drama about a young woman who can't quite tell the difference between freedom and fleeing.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘Eagles of the Republic' Review: How Authoritarians Clip Wings
In the director Tarik Saleh's latest feature on contemporary Egypt, a movie star is made to appear in a propaganda film.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘Blue Heron' Review: Rewinding Time to Find a Brother
Sophy Romvari's superb debut feature blends memory, documentary and fiction to process a family wound.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘Amrum' Review: A Moral Awakening
In this World War II-era coming-of-age drama, a young boy living on a remote German island questions his parents for the first time.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

‘Balls Up' Review: Offend It Like Beckham
Two condom salesmen, Mark Wahlberg and Paul Walter Hauser, embark on a bawdy, digressive picaresque in Peter Farrelly's defiantly lowbrow film.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

Kendrick Lamar's Protégé Baby Keem Tells the Whole Story, Warts and All
The 25-year-old rapper and producer knows he's benefited from his cousin's support. But the path to his autobiographical album, "Casino," was his alone.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

The Enduring Beauty of Black-and-White Games
Mouse: P.I. for Hire is the latest monochrome adventure in an industry often obsessed with realistic graphics.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 16, 2026

Stephen Colbert Wants the Vice President to Lay Off the Pope
The "Late Show" host scolded JD Vance for suggesting that Pope Leo XIV "be careful when he talks about matters of theology."

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Review: ‘The Fear of 13,' With Adrien Brody and Tessa Thompson, Doesn't Add Up
Adrien Brody and Tessa Thompson make confident Broadway debuts, but the uneven script makes for a narratively slippery prison drama.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

5 Takeaways From the Live Nation Antitrust Trial
A jury found that the concert giant operated as a monopoly, a verdict that could have major reverberations in the music industry.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Barbara Gordon, 90, Dies; Wrote a Best Seller About Her Pill Addiction
Her 1979 memoir, "I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can," which also became a movie, detailed years of prescription drug abuse and offered an indictment of American psychiatry.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Live Nation and Ticketmaster Illegally Monopolized Ticketing Market, Jury Finds
In a verdict that could have far-reaching consequences in the music industry, the live colossus that includes Ticketmaster was found to have violated antitrust laws.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Julio Torres, Jennifer Tilly and More Star in Plays That Are Streaming Now
Other picks include the historical hip-hop musical "Mexodus," an Anne Carson radio play and a century-old play about machines replacing humans.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

The Good List: 7 Things to Add Some Delight to Your Day
Train jazz, the "Brady Bunch" house and the gift of time.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Barbara Gordon, Who Wrote Memoir of Pill Addiction, Dies at 90
"I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can," which became a best seller, detailed her years of prescription drug abuse and offered an indictment of American psychiatry.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

‘The Adding Machine' Review: A Man Is Made Redundant
Daphne Rubin-Vega stars as a laid-off office worker who spins into a murderous rage in this update of Elmer L. Rice's 1923 classic.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Review: Here's Johnny! (And Bach and 4 Choreographers)
The violinist Johnny Gandelsman wanted his music to move. In the overly winsome "Johnny Loves Johann," he performs Bach's cello suites alongside four dance artists.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Paris Man Wins $1.2 Million Picasso Painting in Charity Raffle
A Parisian software salesman entered a charity raffle and came away with a piece of history: "I have some paintings, but not like a Picasso."

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum Puts Connecticut Artists in the Spotlight
The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield will showcase works by people who live and work in New York's shadow.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

In the Tech Heart of Texas, an Art Show Built on Data, Code and A.I.
The showcase features works that change from hour to hour, invite interaction and interrogate the idea of creativity itself.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Honoring Frederic Church: Beyond the Hudson River School
His many achievements have been obscured, some believe, by his reputation as a provincial landscape painter.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

‘Giant' Revisits Roald Dahl's Antisemitic Comments: What to Know
Mark Rosenblatt's Broadway play, starring John Lithgow as the British children's book author, draws from Dahl's comments over the years.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

‘Rethinking, Reimagining and Reinstalling' the Metropolitan Museum of Art
A $1.5 billion project will transform the nation's most-visited art museum, with renovations involving a quarter of the galleries and public spaces.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

What to See This Spring at Museums Across the U.S.
The season includes a Duchamp retrospective at MoMA, a window on Etruscan civilization at the de Young in San Francisco and a fashion celebration at the Phoenix Art Museum.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

In Kannywood, a Film Scene Thrives Despite Censorship
A city in Northern Nigeria has turned into a moviemaking machine, churning out hundreds of productions a year.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Kanye West Postpones Concert in France as Government Considers Banning It
The rapper formerly known as Kanye West had been scheduled to perform in Marseille, France, in June. The city's mayor had said he did not want it to be "a showcase for those who promote hatred."

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Elizabeth Banks Reflects on 33 Years of Marriage
The "Miniature Wife" star on why she and her husband have chosen each other, over and over again.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Review: ‘Margo's Got Money Troubles' Will Make an OnlyFan of You
Elle Fanning stars in a big-hearted, open-minded dramedy about online exposure and its complications.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

‘No Picnic' Is a Walk Down Mean Street Memory Lane
This Philip Hartman movie, shot in the East Village in 1985 and now restored, shows at Film Forum through April 23.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Oscar Isaac and Carey Mulligan Have a Generational ‘Beef'
The actors play a married couple on the brink in the second season of the Netflix anthology series.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

In Kannywood, a Film Scene Thrives Despite a Censorship Board
A city in Northern Nigeria has turned into a moviemaking machine, churning out hundreds of productions a year.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

They Were YouTube's First Stars. Here's What They Wish They'd Known.
MatPat, Miranda Sings, Grace Helbig and WheezyWaiter hit it big on YouTube long before it became a behemoth. They have thoughts about what it takes to succeed there.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

As Los Angeles Rebuilds, a Surge of Experimentation
Across the city's fire zones, there's a surge of experimentation — collective rebuilding, catalog homes and new technologies that are safe and reduce costs.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Obsessed With the Titanic? These Historical Fictional Books Will Transport You.
This gripping historical fiction will transport you to the doomed ship and back to land.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Late Night Laughs at Explanations of Trump's Jesus ‘Joke'
Ronny Chieng poked fun at JD Vance's defense of President Trump posting an image of himself as a Christ-like figure.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Billy Crystal to Return to Broadway With Solo Show ‘860' About Losing His Home in L.A. Fires
The actor-comedian said he will return to Broadway this fall with a new solo show called "860," named for the address of his destroyed family home.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 15, 2026

Billy Crystal to Return to Broadway With Solo Show '860' About Losing His Home in L.A. Fires
The actor-comedian said he will return to Broadway this fall with a new solo show called "860," named for the address of his destroyed family home.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

Taylor Frankie Paul Will Not Face New Domestic Violence Charges
Prosecutors in Utah investigated after the reality star's ex-boyfriend told the police she had scratched, shoved and struck him during a fight in February.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

The Museums That Helped Power Atlanta's Rise Are Still Pushing Ahead
For 100 years, the Atlanta History Center and the High Museum of Art have expanded and diversified, not unlike the metropolis itself.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

A New Exhibition at New York's Natural History Museum Honors Fossil Hunters
In a new and ongoing exhibition, the American Museum of Natural History highlights the findings of Mark Norell and other fossil hunters responsible for its most important discoveries.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

Can ‘Michael' Help Restore Jackson's Image? His Estate Is Banking on It.
A new biopic is the latest move in the Jackson estate's posthumous — and lucrative — rehabilitation campaign.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

Moon Rocks! 9 Lunar Songs for the Artemis Crew
Hear from David Bowie, Neko Case, Arthur Russell and more artists inspired by our poetic, mysterious satellite.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

At a Difficult Time, a Minnesota Museum Offers Respite to Somalis
As one of the few institutions of its kind in the world, the Somali Museum of Minnesota has become a center of the immigrant community.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

The Benefactor of the Pulitzer Arts Foundation Curates Its Collection
Emily Rauh Pulitzer, a veteran curator and collector, leans heavily on sculpture and drawing in a show of some 85 works.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

Daring and Dazzling, a New LACMA Floats Above Los Angeles
After $724 million and a decade of battles, the pugnacious David Geffen Galleries reassert the city's role as a petri dish for experimental design.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

‘Planet Money' Is Now a Book. And a Game. And a Record Label.
The long-running economics show on NPR is mining whimsical product experiments for content (and revenue) in a financially challenging environment.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

Can ‘Michael' Help Restore Jackson's Tarnished Image? His Estate Is Banking on It.
A new biopic is the latest move in the Jackson estate's posthumous — and lucrative — rehabilitation campaign.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

What Does an American Orchestra Need in a Conductor?
At a challenging time for American orchestras, the question of what a community wants from a music director has become more urgent.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

Sofia Isella's Dark Pop Is Poetic, Feminist and Right on Time
The 21-year-old singer, songwriter and producer often cakes herself in dirt — a representation of the cultural filth she sings and chants about. Her new EP is out Friday.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

Route 66, a ‘Linear Museum Stretched Across Eight States,' Turns 100
Institutions large and small examine the complicated history of the iconic corridor that helped define the American road trip.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

Why Does the "Rocky" Statue Draw Crowds? This Show Investigates.
This spring, the Philadelphia Museum of Art invites the bronze boxer inside to center an exhibition on why we make monuments and what they mean.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

San Francisco's Modern Art Museum Reimagines the Fisher Collection
The Bay Area family made a deal with SFMOMA that called for exhibitions of the collection's works every 10 years. Some 250 pieces are now showing.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

M.F.A. Boston Celebrates 50 Years of Flowers and Art
The annual "Art in Bloom" exhibition began in 1976 and has spawned similar events at other museums across the country.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

In Indianapolis, a New Contemporary Art Museum Comes With a D.J.
The 40,000-square-foot space, housed in a former dairy barn, aims to upend expectations of what an art museum can be.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 14, 2026

Late Night Takes Sides in the President vs. the Pope
Jimmy Kimmel said President Trump's social media post aimed at Pope Leo XIV "is what happens when you sell Bibles instead of reading them."

NYTimes Arts
Apr 13, 2026

Sid Krofft, 96, Dies; Created Zany TV Shows for Children of All Ages
With his brother Marty, he released a string of wildly inventive programs, including "H.R. Pufnstuf" and "Land of the Lost." Some became cult favorites, even among adults.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 13, 2026

Oasis, Phil Collins and Sade to Join Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
Billy Idol, Luther Vandross and Wu-Tang Clan will also be inducted, while New Edition, Mariah Carey and Melissa Etheridge failed to make the final cut.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 13, 2026

Threats to Library Funding End With Settlement by Trump Administration
The American Library Association filed a lawsuit arguing that cuts ordered by President Trump were illegal because they did not have congressional approval.

NYTimes Arts
Apr 13, 2026

Sid Krofft, 96, a Creator of Trippy Kids' Shows Like ‘H.R. Pufnstuf,' Dies
With his brother Marty, he released a string of zany children's programs. Some became cult favorites (even among adults) and others flopped.

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