Arts
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How Cage the Elephant’s Frontman Nearly Lost It All
Matt Shultz is a rock ’n’ roll ringmaster known for pushing himself to the brink. After a period of psychosis…
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She Walked in Beauty: The Subtle Seductiveness of Anouk Aimée
The French star created characters who could be fantasies or enigmas, but they always intrigued, even when she was miscast…
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Land Art in Malibu Gets a Second Chance
Lita Albuquerque redraws her “Malibu Line,” an ultra-vivid blue earthwork that connects earth, ocean and sky.
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A Palestinian American Choreographer’s Intimate, Epic ‘Gathering’
Samar Haddad King’s premiere at the Shed tells a layered story of trauma, dislocation and resilience.
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Kandinsky Cut Ties With Russia. So Did This Museum.
The first major exhibition at H’Art, a former satellite of the Hermitage, explores how war and nationalism shaped the painter’s…
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You Talkin’ Like Him? A Convention Lets De Niro Fans Get In on the Act.
Participants at De Niro Con in Tribeca could talk like Travis Bickle, shadowbox like Jake LaMotta or get a tattoo…
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Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree Review: Faith, Meet Futility
A new tier of knights, monsters and freaks often exceeds the most demanding late-game adversaries of Elden Ring. Belief in…
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Huey Lewis Musical to Close on Broadway as New Shows Struggle
“The Heart of Rock and Roll” is the first new Broadway musical to announce a closing plan following Sunday’s Tony…
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Review: In ‘Dark Noon,’ American History Is a Shoot-’Em-Up Western
A play from Denmark, with a South African cast, turns the heroic tropes of horse operas into the tools of…
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How to Make Thrilling Theater About Climate Change Negotiations
A new play from the writers of “The Jungle” dramatizes the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, a landmark climate agreement preceded by…