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NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

David Pryce-Jones, Wide-Ranging Conservative Writer, Dies at 89
The author of novels, histories, biographies and influential political essays, he approached them all with a droll British wit and a steadfast commitment to Western values.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Best Movies of 2025
Our film critics rank their 10 favorites of the year.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Dijon, a Studio Maestro, Is Stepping Into the Spotlight
Onstage in Brooklyn, the buzzy producer and musician blasted his songs apart and stitched them back together again.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

11 Musical Love Letters From Artists to Their Heroes
Hear the Replacements (on Big Star), Sonic Youth (on Karen Carpenter), Stevie Wonder (on Duke Ellington) and more.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Finding the Magic, Just in Time (Encore)
Clare Cory was 59 years old and had been single almost her whole life. She thought her love story was over. Then everything changed.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Whoops, the New Skating Rink Is Encroaching on Luciano Pavarotti
"Nessun Dorma?" More like "Ice, Ice Baby," as a statue in Italy is overshadowed.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

See All the Stars at the Gotham Awards: Elle Fanning, Hugh Jackman and More
It was all roast beef, chocolate cake and air kisses at the Gotham Awards in Lower Manhattan.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

The Choreographer Tere O'Connor Adds ‘Explainer' to His Repertoire
After 40 years of making dances as complicated as human consciousness, Tere O'Connor revives his first work at New York Live Arts. Bonus: He will talk about it.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Whatever: A Gen X Glossary
"Androgyny," "apathy" and other words and ideas that defined America's last monoculture.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Why Are There So Many Films Right Now Based on the Bible?
Films that take their stories from the Old or New Testament are filling screens big and small. To understand why, it helps to know Hollywood history.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Take a Look at T Magazine's Gen X Covers by David Silverman of "The Simpsons" and Chris Ware
On two of T Magazine's Holiday Issue covers, an era's biggest stars appear as Simpsons characters. A third features Chris Ware's illustrations of the goods of his youth.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

The 10 Best Books of 2025
After a year of deliberation, the editors at The New York Times Book Review have picked their 10 best books of 2025. Three editors share their favorites.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

For Royal Danish Ballet, It's Back to Bournonville
After years focused on international repertory and new work, the company is returning the choreographer August Bournonville, "our place of belonging," to the heart of its mission.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

What Is Gen X's Legacy?
The generation known for its irony also taught us something about engaging earnestly with art.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Can a Celebrity Be Conservative in Trump's America?
A conversation with the columnist Ross Douthat about how popular culture is reacting to a second Trump administration.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

They Used Art as ‘Fake News' to Sell Colonialism. This Show Is a Fact Check.
A new exhibition at the Africa Museum in Belgium takes a frank look at a large-scale propaganda painting and the institution's own past role in adding to the spin.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Is Gen X Actually the Greatest Generation?
How one era changed everything about the culture — and why we're so nostalgic for its creations.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Inside the Museum-Style Home of Michael Ovitz, an A-List Collector
He is best known as a former Hollywood power broker, but Ovitz has filled his Beverly Hills home with a collection that shows how serious he is about art.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Es Devlin Builds a ‘Library of Us' From the Books That Shaped Her
For Miami Art Week, Devlin has created an open-air installation for Faena Art that invites the public to turn her personal library into a communal one.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

The Pérez Art Museum Miami Wants to Be the ‘People's Museum'
Franklin Sirmans, head of the Pérez Art Museum Miami, discusses building its collection, the dearth of Black art museum directors and navigating Florida politics.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 02, 2025

Late Night Lashes Out at Trump's Tim Walz Taunt
"On Thanksgiving? Are you confusing that with Festivus?" Jon Stewart said of President Trump's Truth Social post insulting the Minnesota governor's intelligence.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Jafar Panahi, Who Filmed in Secret in Iran, Wins Big at Gotham Awards
He won best director, original screenplay and international feature for "It Was Just an Accident." Best feature went to "One Battle After Another."

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Pace, Di Donna and David Schrader Join Forces to Form New Art Gallery
Pace, Di Donna and David Schrader of Sotheby's are collaborating on an Upper East Side space that will focus on secondary market sales.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

28 Fun Things to Do in NYC in December 2025
As the season of Nutcrackers, Messiahs, Scrooges and Santas begins, here are some novel ways to enjoy the holidays, including a poetry weekend and a Coltrane tribute.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Sean ‘Diddy' Combs Demands Netflix Drop 50 Cent Series, Citing New Footage
The mogul's lawyers told the streaming service to withdraw a documentary because it was produced by his rival and uses footage they say was "illicitly" acquired.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

‘The Merchants of Joy' Review: Cutthroat Christmas Tree Sales
A new documentary contains zesty character studies of competing New York City tree vendors as they prepare for the holiday season.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Best Movies and Shows Streaming in December 2025
"F1: The Movie," "It's Never Over, Jeff Buckley" and "The Life of Chuck" arrive, and "Fallout" and "Percy Jackson" return.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

The Best Movies and TV Shows Coming to Disney , Amazon, HBO Max, Peacock and More in December
"F1: The Movie," "It's Never Over, Jeff Buckley" and "The Life of Chuck" arrive, and "Fallout" and "Percy Jackson" return.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

The Best Movies and TV Shows Coming to Netflix in December
A slew of new titles are coming this month, including the latest "Knives Out" mystery and a film starring George Clooney and Adam Sandler.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

13 Plays to See in December Featuring Michelle Williams, Matthew Broderick and More Stars
Michelle Williams leads an O'Neill drama, Matthew Broderick stars in Molière, and plenty of stages brim with non-holiday fare, Off Broadway and beyond.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Nathan Lane and Laurie Metcalf to Star in ‘Death of a Salesman' on Broadway
Joe Mantello will direct the next revival of Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman," opening in April at the Winter Garden Theater.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Two Galleries Form New Art Prize
The FLAG Art Foundation in New York and Serpentine in London have established a 1 million British pound award for five artists.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Sean ‘Diddy' Combs Had a Camera Follow Him. 50 Cent Has the Footage.
The mogul's spokesman said he was "deeply concerned" that video shot days before Mr. Combs's 2024 arrest appears in a new documentary series produced by his rival.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

On the Eve of Art Basel Miami Beach, a Case of the Jitters
Fourteen galleries pulled out of the fair this year, while others chose to stay and embrace the art fray. "It's a good opportunity to be bold," says one dealer.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Miami Beach's New Art Installation Frolics With the Fishes
Our critic explores "Reefline," an underwater public sculpture park that hopes to be a haven for art and corals. But some skeptics question the scientific benefits.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

‘The Artist' Blends Degas and Dollars, Murder and Mandy Patinkin
Created by Aram Rappaport for his streaming service, the Network, the historical drama explores the tensions, sometimes deadly, between art and commerce.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

It's a Homophobic Slur. What's It Doing in So Much Theater?
"Prince Faggot," "Figaro/Faggots" and other productions use the word to shock, provoke, reclaim it for gay men or all of the above. Does that make it OK?

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

37 Things to Do in December
As the season of Nutcrackers, Messiahs, Scrooges and Santas begins, here are some novel ways to enjoy the holidays, including a poetry weekend and a Coltrane tribute.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Norton Art Museum Hosts Old Masters From the Leiden Collection
A show of 76 paintings from the Leiden Collection are on display at the Norton Museum of Art in South Florida.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Untitled Art Fair in Miami Spotlights Hard-to-Define Artists
The new Artist Spotlight section of the Miami event will include 30 galleries focusing on a single artist, some chosen in part for their lack of commercialism.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Why Is Budapest, the ‘City of Baths,' Running Out of Bathhouses?
In Budapest, political disputes and aging infrastructure have led to cascading problems, and prolonged closings, at several of the city's beloved baths.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

Why Is the ‘City of Baths' Running Out of Bathhouses?
In Budapest, political disputes and aging infrastructure have led to cascading problems, and prolonged closings, at several of the city's beloved baths.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

The ‘Race Against Time' to Save Music Legends' Decaying Tapes
New problems are plaguing old reels, putting decades of history at risk. One man, armed with hair dryers and a love of tinkering, is leading the charge to rescue them.

NYTimes Arts
Dec 01, 2025

‘Heated Rivalry,' Plus 8 Things to Watch on TV This Week
A new show based on a Canadian sports romance novel airs. And a reunion of ‘The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives' recaps the third season.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

Tom Stoppard Wrote Dialogue for Indiana Jones and Obi-Wan Kenobi
The playwright won an Academy Award for "Shakespeare in Love." But he was also a prolific script doctor who worked with filmmakers like Steven Spielberg.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

‘It: Welcome to Derry' Season 1, Episode 6 Recap: Daddy's Little Girl
Ingrid's connection to the evil entity known as It is revealed, among other dangerous secrets.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

Daniel Woodrell, ‘Country Noir' Novelist of ‘Winter's Bone,' Dies at 72
His tales of violence and squalor in his native Ozarks had the timeless quality of fables and inspired several movies.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

As a Script Doctor, Tom Stoppard Was Stealthily Erudite
The playwright won an Academy Award for "Shakespeare in Love." But he also helped provide dialogue for the likes of Obi-Wan Kenobi and Indiana Jones.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

The Oxford 2025 Word of the Year Is ‘Rage Bait'
And if you're angry about it, that just proves the point.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

Biyouna, Algerian Star With Tart Tongue Onscreen and Off, Dies at 73
For generations of Algerians, the fierce independence of her persona reflected their struggles in a country torn by civil war and repression.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

Movies Written by Tom Stoppard to Stream
Spinning off Shakespeare, waltzing through Imperial Russia, bantering about literature or diving deeply into history, Stoppard shared his gifts on the screen.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

Stream Movies Written by Tom Stoppard: ‘Shakespeare In Love' and More
Spinning off Shakespeare, waltzing through Imperial Russia, bantering about literature or diving deeply into history, Stoppard shared his gifts on the screen.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

Review: It's Hard to Breathe in This ‘Walküre'
The singers did marvelous work at the Opéra Bastille in Paris, where the director Calixto Bieito's new staging takes place in a hellish dystopia.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

Glenn Close, Ethan Hawke and Others Mourn Tom Stoppard
Nobody advanced or cherished the English language more than Stoppard, Tim Curry noted. Colleagues and fans agreed.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

When Tom Stoppard Confronted His Background in His Final Play ‘Leopoldstadt'
The playwright, who learned about his Jewish heritage late in life, addressed it in the Tony Award-winning drama "Leopoldstadt."

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

When Tom Stoppard Confronted His Background in His Final Play
The playwright, who learned about his Jewish heritage late in life, addressed it in the Tony Award-winning drama "Leopoldstadt."

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

Beyond Art Basel Miami Beach, a Lesson in Cuban American History Awaits
Visitors to the fair will find a city overflowing with history and art, including contemporary graffiti and posthumous museum retrospectives.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

Headed to Art Basel Miami Beach? Here's What to Know.
Here are some tips on navigating the largest Art Basel fair in the United States, which will bring together 283 galleries from around the world.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

Nashville Closed a Red Grooms Masterpiece. Now the City Wants It Back.
Art lovers call for the return of a shuttered carousel they say is the casualty of a boomtown razing its own visual heritage.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 30, 2025

Jack Pierson in Miami: An Artist and a City in Transformation
Visits to the area in the 1980s left a lasting impression on the artist and his work.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 29, 2025

The Language of Tom Stoppard, Ablaze With Energy and Urgency
In works like "Travesties" and "Arcadia," the playwright embraced the really big questions and wrestled words into coherent, exhilarating shape.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 29, 2025

The Grand Ole Opry Toasts 100 Years and Considers What's Next
A hundred years after it first went live, Nashville's famed country music show celebrated its history with a series of performances.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 29, 2025

Tom Stoppard, Award-Winning Playwright of Witty Drama, Dies at 88
Drawing comparisons to the greatest of dramatists, he entwined erudition with imagination in stage works that won accolades on both sides of the Atlantic.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 29, 2025

Jason Schwartzman Finds Peace at the Library
"It's almost like a movie set," said the actor, now in the Christmas film "Oh. What. Fun.," "and I have to pretend I'm working, too."

NYTimes Arts
Nov 29, 2025

What's on Your Best-Of List for 2025? We Want to Know.
Best change to your evening routine? Best popcorn seasoning? Best overheard conversation? Tell us your super-subjective, idiosyncratic favorites from the past year.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 29, 2025

5 Podcasts to Help You Savor Coffee
These shows will deepen your appreciation of that next cup of joe, offering detours into coffee house history and tips on how to buy, brew and drink coffee.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 29, 2025

‘Hamilton' Has Had Quite a Run: An Artist Looks Back
Our cartoonist had no idea the Broadway musical he scored tickets to in 2015 would become a cultural phenomenon — and an enduring reminder of battles to be fought.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 29, 2025

The Beguiling, Misunderstood Theremin
Invented by accident in the 1920s, the unusual electronic instrument is hard to master but offers an enticing reward: freedom.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 29, 2025

For Detectives on TV, the Messiest Case Is Often at Home
Why do we rarely see them leave work to take the kids to baseball practice? Some of it has to do with the nature of police work, but a tortured back story adds intrigue.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 28, 2025

Ellen Bryant Voigt, Poet With a Musical Ear, Dies at 82
Her nine volumes included "Kyrie," a suite of sonnets about the 1918 influenza epidemic. She was also Pulitzer Prize finalist and a poet laureate of Vermont.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 28, 2025

Five Action Movies to Stream Now
This month's picks include elaborate ambulance chasing, a killer shark and crime south of the border.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 28, 2025

A Guide to NYC Holiday Events: Rockefeller Tree Lighting, Ice Skating and More
Matinees, ice skating and train shows: Here are some of our favorite things to do this season.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 28, 2025

At Tate Britain's Turner and Constable Show, You Don't Have to Pick Sides
J.M.W. Turner and John Constable were fueled by competition, but united by a common wonder at nature's beauty.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 28, 2025

7 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
Nov 28, 2025

Three Great Documentaries to Stream
In this month's picks, a portrait of a vanguard filmmaker, a look back at a televised clash between writers, and a reflection on a Hollywood star and pinup.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 28, 2025

John Tesh Keeps Bouncing Ba-Ba-Ba-Ba-Ba Back
The resurgence of "Roundball Rock," the N.B.A. theme song he composed, has made the musician more visible than he's been in over 20 years. He hasn't been idle.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 28, 2025

The Great Beatles Documentary That's Nearly Impossible to See (Legally)
With "The Beatles Anthology" now on Disney , we dig into "The Compleat Beatles," another documentary on the band that is difficult to see legally but had an impact on a generation.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 28, 2025

In ‘The Tale of Silyan,' the Storks Are Watching
The birds' presence lends an otherworldly air to this nonfiction look at a family farm in a dying North Macedonian village.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 28, 2025

‘The Holiday': A Festive Cocktail, Equal Parts Charm and Cringe
Cameron Diaz, Kate Winslet, Jude Law and Jack Black delivered a lesson on chemistry, good and bad, in the 2006 Nancy Meyers rom-com.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

Louvre Raising Ticket Prices for Non-European Visitors
From Jan. 14, visitors to the museum from outside the European Economic Area will pay 45 percent more for entry to help finance its ambitious renovation plan.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

Ruth Thorne-Thomsen, Photographer of Dreamlike Tableaux, Dies at 82
Using a pinhole camera, she captured miniature landscapes that she had fashioned to resemble surreal versions of 19th-century travel photos.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

At New York City Ballet's ‘Nutcracker,' Bring on Fritz and Brat Winter
At New York City Ballet, two boys from the School of American Ballet get to play a coveted role: Fritz, a terror of a little brother.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

How a Rediscovered Klimt Got Swept Up in an International Dispute
The Viennese painter's portrait of a West African prince was owned by a Jewish family who fled the Nazi occupation. It was then taken to Hungary, which has now moved to block a sale by an Austrian gallery.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

Robert A.M. Stern, Architect Who Reinvented Prewar Splendor, Dies at 86
He designed museums, schools and libraries before winning international acclaim late in life for 15 Central Park West in Manhattan, hailed as a rebirth of the luxury apartment building.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

‘Blossoms Shanghai' Review: In the Mood for Commerce
Wong Kar-wai's first TV series, streaming on the Criterion Channel, is a lush melodrama about an economic miracle.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

5 Years After His Death, John Prine Gets a Cinematic Send-Off
The singer and songwriter died in April 2020 of Covid-19, delaying proper tributes. Now he is the subject of a new documentary, "You Got Gold."

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

A Guide to N.Y.C. Holiday Events: Music, Lights and More
Matinees, ice skating and train shows: Here are some of our favorite things to do this season.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

‘You Got Gold: A Celebration of John Prine' Review: Paying Tribute in Nashville
Lyle Lovett, Bonnie Raitt, Kacey Musgraves and other luminaries perform Prine's songs in this engaging concert film.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

‘The Thing With Feathers' Review: Parenting Without Your Better Half
A grieving father struggles to care for his two children after the death of his wife. Even with its star, Benedict Cumberbatch, the movie never takes flight.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

‘The Stringer: The Man Who Took the Photo' Review: Freelancing Woes
Was a freelance photographer intentionally left out of the famous Vietnam War photo of "Napalm Girl"?

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

‘Left-Handed Girl' Review: An Electric Portrait of Taipei
The filmmaker Shih-Ching Tsou tells a sensitive story of a mother and her two daughters struggling to get by in Taiwan.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

‘BLKNWS: Terms & Conditions' Review: An Artist's Mind-Expanding Collage
In this dazzling essay movie, the director Kahlil Joseph draws on an array of sources — news clips, old movies, family albums, an encyclopedia of "Africana" — to create a thrilling whole.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

‘Stranger Things' Cast Looks Back on the Show and How It Shaped Them
The first episodes of the final season just premiered on Netflix. In interviews, the young stars looked back on the show and how it shaped them.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

3 Cozy Books We Love
Pick up a mug of tea, grab a blanket and settle down to read. Jennifer Harlan, an editor at The New York Times Book Review, recommends three books that are perfect for cozy fall reading.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 27, 2025

Jimmy Fallon Gets Into the Spirit of ‘Drinksgiving'
"'Twas the night before Thanksgiving, and in your parents' house, they put the Peloton in your old bedroom, so you're sleeping on the couch," Fallon mused.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 26, 2025

Tiny Love Stories: ‘No Hugging … and Definitely Nothing Lewd'
Modern Love in miniature, featuring reader-submitted stories of no more than 100 words.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 26, 2025

Broadway Performers Rehearse for the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade
We tagged along to a late-night rehearsal for performers from "Just in Time," "Buena Vista Social Club" and "Ragtime."

NYTimes Arts
Nov 26, 2025

A Speedy Art-Career Rise Fueled by a Descent Into Our Modern Abyss
Contemporary life, speculative fiction, Asian futurism and social documentary all meet in Ayoung Kim's videos at MoMA PS1. And are they fun to watch!

NYTimes Arts
Nov 26, 2025

‘The Secret Agent' Review: Wagner Moura Is on the Run
Wagner Moura takes cover in this knockout from the filmmaker Kleber Mendonça Filho that is largely set in 1977 during Brazil's miliary dictatorship.

NYTimes Arts
Nov 26, 2025

Apple TV Series ‘The Hunt' Is Pulled Amid Accusations of Plagiarism
Apple TV postponed the launch of the French-language series following accusations that its creator copied key elements from a 1973 novel.

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