Arts
-
Review: Shanghai’s Open Door to Jews, Remembered in Music
“Émigré,” a bland oratorio about brothers who flee to China to escape Nazi persecution, was given its American premiere by…
-
How an Argument Resonates in ‘Anatomy of a Fall’
The director Justine Triet narrates a sequence from her film, which is nominated for best picture. Triet is also nominated…
-
‘Dune’ Fans, Here’s a Documentary That Will Blow Your Mind
‘Jodorowsky’s Dune’ chronicles a director’s determination to film his vision of the saga, one that would have included Mick Jagger…
-
‘Who TF Did I Marry?!?’ Rings in TikTok’s Midlife Crisis Era
Reesa Teesa’s 50-part drama about her marriage — one she says was built on lies about mortgages, car payments and…
-
Jacqueline Woodson’s Books Leap Off the Page, at BAM
A dance performance of “The Other Side” and a musical adaptation of “Show Way” head to the Brooklyn stage for…
-
Artist Featured in ‘Erotic Carnival’ Ad Campaign Sues Museum of Sex
Julia Sinelnikova says the museum plastered an image of a kiss with a girlfriend all over New York, including on…
-
With Richard Lewis, Kvetching Was Charismatic
The comedian gave his Jewish neurotic persona a nervy cool even as he threw his whole body into his comedy.
-
In Art, Migrants Weave Memories of Their Great Escape
At Apexart, an exhibition by Venezuelan migrants offers “a chance to be a part of something again, to return to…
-
Review: The Met Opera’s ‘Turandot’ Returns With a Strong Debut
In a revival of Franco Zeffirelli’s lavish production, the conductor Oksana Lyniv led a performance that transcended the gilded stage…
-
What John Singer Sargent Saw
At a retrospective of his portraits in London, where the American expatriate fled after creating a scandal in Paris, clothes…