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NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

Iris Cantor, Philanthropist and Art Collector, Dies at 95
She and her husband, the financier B. Gerald Cantor, amassed one of the largest private collections of Rodin artworks, donating much of it to museums around the world.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

Sondra Lee Dies at 97; Originated Roles in ‘Peter Pan' and ‘Hello, Dolly!'
With her frenetic energy and 4-foot-10 frame, Ms. Lee seemed destined to play a certain kind of stage character: excitable, endearing and charmingly scheming.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

Review: ‘Gala Flamenca' Brings New Blood and Traditional Thrills
The centerpiece of the annual Flamenco Festival New York saw the introduction of another wonder in Juan Tomás de la Molía, alongside some veterans of the art.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

Review: Robert Rauschenberg's Sharp Dancing Mind on Display
The Trisha Brown Dance Company is presenting a stellar double bill of Rauschenberg-designed works by Merce Cunningham and Trisha Brown.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

Review: Harpist Parker Ramsay Merges Old and New With Friends
The multifaceted musician Parker Ramsay assembled an evening of Baroque and contemporary music, including a premiere by Georg Friedrich Haas.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

‘Chinese Republicans' Review: These Women Are Playing to Win
Alex Lin's new play focuses on four ambitious climbers of the corporate ladder. But their success comes at what cost?

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

Five Horror Movies to Stream Now
This month brings a malign quarterback, a naughty robot hottie and the grim reaper himself.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

6 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
Feb 27, 2026

Are Germany's Top Cultural Events Becoming Impossible to Run?
A dispute over free speech at the Berlin Film Festival around Israel's actions in Gaza, and rumors of the festival director's firing, raised broader worries about Germany's cultural landscape.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

Chris Fleming Uses Dance to Make Us Laugh in His HBO Special
The kind of performer other stand-ups rave about, Chris Fleming turns to choreography to land jokes in his new HBO special.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

‘Murder in Glitterball City' and True Crime's Obsession With Location
The two-part documentary on HBO is not just the story of a gruesome murder, but a portrait of the city, neighborhood and home where it happened.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

How ‘The Pitt' Grosses You Out
The medical drama tests viewers with protruding bones, visible organs and buckets of blood. Here's how makeup and effects artists created seven gory afflictions.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

Watch the Final Scene of ‘Train Dreams'
The director Clint Bentley discusses the conclusion to his film, which stars Joel Edgerton and is an Oscar nominee for best picture.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

‘Scream 7' Controversies: What You Need to Know
The franchise's latest edition ran into trouble on the way to the screen. Here's what happened.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

‘DTF St. Louis' Review: Sex, Death and Jamba Juice
Steven Conrad ("Patriot") brings his oddball sensibility to the limited-crime-series genre for HBO.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

‘Paul McCartney: Man on the Run' Tells One Side of the Story
The Morgan Neville-directed film relies on new and archival interviews to cover familiar ground: the years after the Beatles broke up.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

Resident Evil's ‘Addictive Fear' Is Keenly Calibrated
To go beyond jump scares, the director of Resident Evil Requiem has learned from "Weapons," "The Shining" and "The X-Files."

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

27 New Books to Read in March: Tana French, Liza Minnelli, Cat Sebastian and More
Novels by Tana French, Yann Martel and Cat Sebastian; memoirs by Christina Applegate and Liza Minnelli; a Judy Blume biography and more.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

I Needed ‘Heated Rivalry': Gay Romance Minus the Tragedy
After a lifetime of settling for shame, secrecy and death onscreen, I had my doubts about "Heated Rivalry." Then it seduced me, too.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

TMZ Drives Celebrity News. Thank This L.A. Intersection.
The website known for breaking news about famous deaths and juicy scandals has a name with roots in old Hollywood.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

‘Train Dreams' | Anatomy of a Scene
The director Clint Bentley narrates a sequence from his film starring Joel Edgerton.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 27, 2026

Late Night Lampoons Trump's State of the Union Ratings
Stephen Colbert joked that the president "is really dragging down broadcast television" with lower ratings for Tuesday's State of the Union than last year's address.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

‘The Pitt' Season 2, Episode 8 Recap: Unplugged
Without internet, the Pitt was even more chaotic than usual. This on a national holiday on which people blow up things for fun.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

Netflix Backs Out of Bid for Warner Bros., Paving Way for Paramount Takeover
The move was a stunning development in the long-running corporate battle for the storied media giant.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

Jean Widmer, Designer of Celebrated French Graphics, Dies at 96
His minimalist road signs became a visual hallmark of France's highways. He also created logos for cultural institutions like the Pompidou Center.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

Teresa de Lauretis, Coiner (and Critic) of Queer Theory, Dies at 87
She came up with the term as the title of a 1990 conference but saw its later popularity as a little superficial.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

‘Scream 7' Review: Neve Campbell Returns to Face Ghostface
Ghostface has returned amid a light fog of nostalgia in this reunion for some of the franchise's most terrified faces, including Neve Campbell's.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

‘Scream 7' Review: It's Hard to Keep a Good Ghoul Down
Ghostface has returned amid a light fog of nostalgia in this reunion for some of the franchise's most terrified faces, including Neve Campbell's.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

Review: Aya Ogawa's ‘Meat Suit' Sits With the Mess of Motherhood
In Aya Ogawa's compassionate, sharply comical play, the pastel-pink public image of mommyhood doesn't stand a chance.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

Rose Lesniak, Poet Who Rescued Children and Trained Dogs, Dies at 70
A magnetic personality, she reinvented herself twice, bringing the same spirit to investigating child abuse and communing with dogs that she did to writing poetry.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

Megan Thee Stallion to Step Into Broadway's ‘Moulin Rouge! The Musical'
For eight weeks this spring, the popular rapper will be featured as a nightclub impresario in "Moulin Rouge! The Musical."

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

What Belongs in America's 250th Birthday Time Capsule?
The federal group organizing the upcoming Semiquincentennial unveiled details of a vessel to be placed near Independence Hall on July 4 and opened in 2276.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

Tracey Emin on Love, Loss and Getting Out of ‘My Bed'
Since the artist was diagnosed with aggressive bladder cancer in 2020, a lot has changed in her life and work. A new show at Tate Modern examines Tracey Emin's "second life."

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

‘Fast Car' Changed Luke Combs's Life. He's Back for More Hits.
The country singer helped to usher the genre into the streaming era before taking a step back. On his new album, he wants to go for broke.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

‘The Luckiest Man in America' and More Streaming Gems
A game-show drama and a documentary valentine to a cult movie queen are among the little treats tucked away on your subscription streaming services this month.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

With Bends, Crinkles and a Cool Decor Makeover, Carol Bove Takes the Guggenheim
She extracts something new from steel, dispelling its aura of brawn. Her signature form is a rumpled ribbon of metal painted to look as soft as suede.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

Noguchi Envisioned a More Open New York. New York Wasn't Interested.
Isamu Noguchi became one of the most successful artists of the 20th century, but the city met his plans for public spaces with indifference.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

‘Grease 2,' the Giddy, Raunchy Flop That Brought Us Michelle Pfeiffer
The highly anticipated 1982 sequel failed to meet expectations at the time but has since charmed an adoring following with its ambitions dance numbers and nonstop ear worms.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

‘In the Blink of an Eye' Review: We Are the Future
These three connected stories about the whole of human history can't quite sustain the necessary emotional heft.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

‘K-Pops!' Review: Reconnecting Through Music
Anderson .Paak directs and stars alongside his real-life son in this film, which offers sometimes charming, if somewhat sterile pleasures.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

‘Idiotka' Review: She's a Haute Mess
A scrappy Russian American seamstress from West Hollywood competes in a fashion design reality show in this clever and earnest indie comedy.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

‘Ghost Elephants' Review: Pursuing What Could Be a Dream
Werner Herzog's new documentary about the hunt for elephants in Angola focuses less on the animals and more on the pursuers.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

‘Dreams' Review: Erotic, but Not Enough Charge
Jessica Chastain plays a wealthy philanthropist obsessed with an undocumented dancer in this chilly drama.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

Melissa Auf der Maur, a '90s Rock Linchpin, Is Spilling Her Stories
The bassist and photographer who logged time in Hole and Smashing Pumpkins unpacks one of the most creative and chaotic times of her life in a new memoir.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 26, 2026

Late Night Fixates on How Long Trump Spoke
"This time, Trump spoke and everyone else fell asleep," Jimmy Fallon said.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

Ann Godoff, a Top Editor and Publisher of Best Sellers, Dies at 76
Considered an "author's publisher" at Random House and then Penguin, she cultivated the careers of dozens of celebrated novelists and nonfiction writers.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

Lauren Chapin, Youngest Child on ‘Father Knows Best,' Dies at 80
For six seasons, she was Kathy, a giggly tomboy whose father, played by Robert Young, called her Kitten. Her offscreen life, however, was harrowing.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

Three Great Frederick Wiseman Documentaries to Stream
This month offers a tribute to the prolific filmmaker who died last week at 96 and has a plausible claim to being the greatest documentarian who ever lived.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

Resident Evil Requiem Shines Within Its Confines
The corridors of a former sanitarium are both terrifying and rewarding, while Raccoon City is bland and filled with chores.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

A Seasoned French Museum Chief Takes Over a Louvre in Crisis
Christophe Leribault, who runs the Palace of Versailles, will replace Laurence des Cars, who resigned months after an audacious jewel heist.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

Phil Collins, Wu-Tang Clan and Lauryn Hill Are Among Rock Hall of Fame Nominees
Jeff Buckley, Lauryn Hill, New Edition and INXS are also included on the ballot for the first time.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

Phil Collins, Wu-Tang Clan and Shakira Are Among Rock Hall Nominees
Jeff Buckley, Lauryn Hill, New Edition and INXS are also included on the ballot for the first time.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

‘Modern Love': I Didn't Want to Have Kids. My Husband Did. Could Our Marriage Survive?
Helena de Groot thought she had decided not to become a mother. But, she found, she had to make that decision over and over again.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

Watch Renate Reinsve Struggle With Stage Fright in ‘Sentimental Value'
The director Joachim Trier narrates a theatrical sequence from his film, nominated for nine Academy Awards, including best picture.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

Delroy Lindo on ‘Sinners,' the Oscars and the Power of Affirmation
In a career of standout performances and dispiriting lows, Lindo, 73, has held firm to his goal: "I want to be respected for my work."

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

‘Days and Nights in the Forest': Into the Woods With Satyajit Ray
In a new 4K restoration of this 1970 Indian classic, four upper-caste men travel for an adventure, with their entitlement taking a starring role.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

What Do They Eat at Awards Shows (and Why Do We Care)?
Interest has surged in what stars are served at shows like the Golden Globes. Does it matter what the rich eat, or do we just want to eat the rich?

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

In ‘Mother Russia,' Lauren Yee Raucously Examines a Shifting Post-Soviet Society
Lauren Yee's boisterous play "Mother Russia," about the origins of the contemporary oligarchy, has its roots in her San Francisco childhood.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

The New York International Children's Film Festival
Indigenous peoples, interspecies friendships, space travel and a history-making young paleontologist are on the bill for this annual event.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

‘The Bluff' Review: She Has a Very Particular Set of Skills
Priyanka Chopra Jonas plays a notorious pirate who must protect her family at all costs in this Caribbean action movie.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

Gathering Force in the Art Market: Female Collectors
With women now controlling more than one-third of global wealth, they are spending more on art than men do, data shows, and influencing what museums acquire.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

Podcasts? TV Talk Shows? Netflix Just Hopes They're Hits.
The podcasts in the streamer's debut crop, including "The Pete Davidson Show," have revived metaphysical questions about the definition of the medium.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

‘Sentimental Value' | Anatomy of a Scene
The director Joachim Trier narrates a sequence from his film.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 25, 2026

Jimmy Kimmel Goes Live After a Super Long State of the Union
"I can't believe America missed an all-new ‘Will Trent' for this one," he joked.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

Éliane Radigue, Composer of Time, Silence and Space, Dies at 94
Her Tibetan Buddhist spiritual practice and her experiments with synthesizers came together in vast, slow-moving works that drew wide acclaim.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

‘Heated Rivalry' Author Says Parkinson's Symptoms Are Worsening and Delays Book
Rachel Reid told fans that the disease's progression was slowing her writing and that a much-anticipated follow-up book would be pushed back.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

6 (More) Albums I'm Looking Forward to in 2026
Hear anticipated new music from Lana Del Rey, Graces Ives, Yaya Bey and more.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

Review: ‘You Got Older,' With Alia Shawkat, Gets a Sharp Revival
Clare Barron's gorgeous play, about an unmoored young woman returning home to care for her father, finds a new home at Cherry Lane Theater.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

International Booker Prize Nominees: 13 Books to Get You Talking
Novels by Daniel Kehlmann, Olga Ravn and Gabriela Cabezón Cámara are among the 13 titles nominated for the renowned award for fiction translated into English.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

Robert Carradine, Actor Who Played the Father in ‘Lizzie McGuire,' Dies at 71
A member of a renowned acting dynasty, he also earned fame for his role in "Revenge of the Nerds." His family said he struggled with bipolar disorder.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

Russell Brand Pleads Not Guilty to Further Rape and Sexual Assault Charges
The YouTuber, actor and comedian had already pleaded not guilty to five other charges of sexual assault in Britain.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

Gustavo Dudamel's Long Goodbye to L.A., and Long Hello to New York
As the conductor prepares to leave the Los Angeles Philharmonic for the New York Philharmonic, he says, "I am in two waters."

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

For Lee Krasner and Jackson Pollock, Equal Footing at the Met
Krasner was typecast as the wife of the breakout artist of the Abstract Expressionist movement, no matter how renegade her own work. At the Met this fall, she emerges from his giant shadow.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

Reanimal Is a Modern-Day Fairy Tale About Cycles of Trauma
Reanimal puts children in perilous circumstances, a familiar theme for the studio behind Little Nightmares.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

A Modern-Day Fairy Tale About Cycles of Trauma
Reanimal puts children in perilous circumstances, a familiar theme for the studio behind Little Nightmares.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

A Chimney in Search of a Home Lands 3,000 Miles Away
Kelly Akashi, an artist, was one of thousands who lost their houses in last winter's Eaton wildfire in Los Angeles. Her new sculpture for the Whitney Biennial marks one year of slow recovery.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

Dance Reflections Returns With Bumps but a Thrilling Ride
Dance Reflections, a festival that pushes contemporary dance brought performances to Manhattan and Brooklyn last weekend.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

Anne Frank's Love for Classical Music L Her Diary
Her diary overflows with her devotion to books and movies. But after rereading the entries, a critic was struck by how often she writes about music.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 24, 2026

Late Night Sums Up Trump's Tariff Tiff with the Supreme Court
"Wow, a court composed mostly of his own party's appointees has struck down the constitutionality of Trump's go-it-alone tariff regime," Jon Stewart said. "That's bound to cause him some introspection."

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

‘Mother Russia' Review: A New Play That's as Funny as It's Smart
A strong cast stars in Lauren Yee's new play, part of a cycle of works about the collisions between 20th-century communism and pop culture.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

Edward Hoagland, Literary Explorer of Nature and Himself, Dies at 93
In his lyrical writings, he examined physical landscapes as well as the interior terrain of his own life — up to the blindness that overtook him in his later years.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

A Wake for The Washington Post's Book World
Literary and cultural denizens of the nation's capital gathered on Saturday to eulogize The Post's scuppered Book World supplement.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

Jeff and Lauren Sánchez Bezos Will Be Honorary Chairs of the Met Gala
The news came tucked into the second page of a recent news release.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

Edward Hoagland, Acclaimed Essayist on the Natural World, Dies at 93
In his lyrical writings, he explored physical landscapes as well as the interior terrain of his own life — up to the blindness that overtook him in his later years.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

Edward Hoagland, Lyrical Chronicler of the Natural World, Dies at 93
In essays and books, he explored physical landscapes and the terrain of his own life, up to the blindness that overtook him in his later years.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

BAFTAs Guest With Tourettes Shouts Racial Slur During Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo's Appearance
A racist slur, shouted involuntarily while Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting an award, raised questions about how the show's host and the BBC responded.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

The Never-Ending Trial of Tyra Banks
A new docuseries has renewed criticism of the supermodel-turned-TV mogul. It's just one cost of her barrier-breaking career.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

How a Tourette's Outburst of a Racist Slur Caused a Backlash at the BAFTAs
A racist slur, shouted involuntarily while Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting an award, raised questions about how the show's host and the BBC responded.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

Nick Reiner Pleads Not Guilty in the Killing of His Parents
Mr. Reiner, 32, was charged with murdering his parents, the Hollywood director Rob Reiner and Michele Singer Reiner, last year.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

‘Survivor' Is America
It's our greatest game and our truest mirror. And in its tiki-torch-festooned way, it's captured our society as an ever-changing collection of tribes.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

Architecture Prize Responds After Tom Pritzker's Epstein Ties Surface
A Pritzker Prize statement cited the award's independence after Mr. Pritzker, who directs the foundation behind the award, resigned as chairman of the Hyatt Corporation.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

BAFTAs 2026: The Best and Worst Moments
Alan Cumming forced fishy British snacks onto movie stars. Paddington Bear presented an award. And there was more swearing, and racial curses, than this awards show has ever heard.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

The Soundtrack of the Doomscroll Generation? It's Phonk.
YouTube Shorts and TikToks are often set to electronic dance music with rap roots that's become the unconscious hum of vertical video while making its creators rich.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

‘The Inquisitor' Review: Barbara Jordan Is Speaking
This whirlwind biographical documentary puts Barbara Jordan, the esteemed congresswoman and professor who died in 1996, front and center as a voice of moral authority.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

From Sundance Director to Head of Film Forum
Tabitha Jackson sees an opportunity to develop the next generation of cinephiles at the Greenwich Village art-house cinema.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

Bad Bunny Sparks a Salsa Surge With Young Dancers
His "Baile Inolvidable" has sparked a surge of interest in salsa dancing and brought in a younger generation. "It's been positively contagious," a teacher said.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 23, 2026

The ‘Scrubs' Reboot, Plus 6 Things to Watch on TV This Week
The medical comedy is back for another run, and the 50th season of "Survivor" is set to begin.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 22, 2026

‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms' Season 1 Finale Recap: On the Road Again
A melancholy finale sees Dunk finally treated as a proper knight, which includes a royal request to take on Egg as his proper squire.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 22, 2026

Susan Sheehan, Pulitzer-Winning Chronicler of Lives on the Margins, Dies at 88
As a journalist and author, she wrote meticulous portraits of people for The New Yorker. Her book "Is There No Place on Earth for Me?" won the Pulitzer Prize.

NYTimes Arts
Feb 22, 2026

Ethan Slater Stars as the Mime Marcel Marceau in ‘Marcel on the Train'
This bio play about Marcel Marceau, which delves into his part in the French Resistance, stars Ethan Slater (yes, that's Boq from the "Wicked" movies).

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