Ronald Reagan’s 1985 speech at Bergen-Belsen was imbued with genuine, rather than staged, emotion.
An exhibition challenges the notion that Romanticism stood in opposition to reason and scientific method.
Discovered in an archive after their creator’s death, these are uncommon images from an uncommon talent.
How are musicians able to memorize so much music?
This exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art dives into the work of forgotten photographer Captain Linnaeus Tripe.
Recent performances by the Mark Morris Dance Group included the New York premiere of ‘Spring, Spring, Spring’ and the world premiere of ‘Whelm.’
The Corning Museum of Glass’s new Contemporary Art + Design Wing, designed by Thomas Phifer and Partners, is a unifying structure of minimalist sensibility.
During Rembrandt’s most intense experimentation with etching, he created some of the most ambitious and fully realized works in the history of printmaking.
These unconventional works sit at the intersection of fashion, retail and design.
The new documentary “Don’t Think I’ve Forgotten: Cambodia’s Lost Rock and Roll” recounts the fate of Cambodian musicians, including the band Baksey Cham Krong.
The family that invented Raku has maintained a legacy of craftsmanship for 15 generations.
Dan Kiley’s modern landscapes provide welcome relief from the city while also complementing modernist architecture.
The classic story of Russian life before and after the October Revolution becomes a Broadway musical.
An exhibition at the Queens Museum examines the modern world through the lens of an independent India.
Through a half-century, the AACM has grown from a collective of ambitious Chicago musicians to an engine of creative inspiration and practical outreach that has touched nearly all corners of modern music.
The musical based on Alison Bechdel’s coming-out memoir moves to Broadway and is grander in scale and more emotionally intense.
Star soprano Renée Fleming is in her first play, but despite her operatic bona fides this comedy about a conductor and a diva hits a sour note.
An exhibition focuses on structured garments, especially undergarments, from the early 1600s to the present day that have been used to shape the wearer’s body.
Richard Estes’s Photorealism captures the sensory overload one gets on any New York sidewalk.
A series at the Museum of the Moving Image looks at the work of Tsai Ming-liang, whose films portray isolation in urban spaces with poetic imagination.
A 21st-century tribute to Billie Holiday from José James celebrates the 100th anniversary of Lady Day’s birth.
A pair of shows at the Metropolitan Opera mix jealousy with inebriated men for murderous results.
A nice-Jewish-girl-marries-nice-Catholic-boy musical farce that’s full of clichés.
In the ’60s, Music Row’s focus expanded beyond traditional country into the overlapping arenas of rock, commercial folk and singer-songwriter artistry.
Just as today’s music fans make their own playlists on streaming services or in their iTunes libraries, Coachella attendees create their own festival to suit their eclectic preferences.
Illustrating Cervantes’s book, on the easel and at the loom—now on view at the Frick Collection.
As it continues to reorganize itself, the Dance Theater of Harlem faces more stumbling blocks than stepping stones.
With almost 40 years of performing, violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter can impress in both the core repertory and more modern scores.
Christopher Wheeldon’s ‘An American in Paris’ is musical-comedy dance made by a choreographer who can do more than just stage a song.
A look at the evolution of Lewis Carroll’s story, 150 years on.
Are competitions or mentorship better for jump-starting a career?
The Stephen Petronio Company celebrates the masters of postmodern dance with ‘Locomotor/Non Locomotor’ and ‘RainForest.’
When it comes to Nazi-looted art, there are still many works in dispute.
An exhibition that sheds light on the careers of two artists and enlarges the understanding of how some of Rivera’s iconic murals were painted.
A recording that recasts Billie Holiday on the singer’s 100th birthday.
On independent record stores and the resurgence of vinyl.
Attacks on cultural heritage assert that Islam should have authority over any religion’s or culture’s presentation of images.
The history of “The King and I,” which is about to open in its first Broadway revival since the 1990s.
Favored by shoguns and aristocrats, the Kano school of painting lasted some 400 years.
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Embodying fear, loss and grief to remember the disappeared.
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Get behind the scenes of the iconic series before it wraps up forever.
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Handel and Haydn perform Bach’s classic; two fun and intimate shows by Heartbeat Opera.
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How the iPhone’s slo-mo video is changing dance.
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An introduction to an unruly Constructivist whose work bridges African and Modernist sensibilities.
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Tradition material gets staged in a nontraditional setting in these two operas at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
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Dance happens under the sea and in the streets in these performances at the American Museum of Natural History and the Park Avenue Armory.
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A show that confirms suspicions that MoMA feels a need to stage vapid spectacles.
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A look at the unlikely evolution Son Lux, the trio of Ryan Lott, Ian Chang and Rafiq Bhatia that both surprised and thrilled at SXSW.
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Contemporary musical language smoothly joined to symphonic tradition in works by Thomas Adès, John Adams and Esa-Pekka Salonen.
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Secret associations and unknown artists lie behind these works that are rich in physical beauty and formal power.
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In the midst of so much lackluster modern dance, two new works from Paul Taylor are a reminder of the choreographer’s shining talent.
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Ignoring the elitist East Coast fashion establishment—too hidebound, too ladies-who-lunch—Rudi Gernreich was instead witty, arty and experimental.
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Largely self-taught, Antoni Tàpies channeled artists from Paul Klee, to the Dadaists, to Robert Rauschenberg.
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This year’s South By Southwest dropped the tabloid glitz from 2014, acting as a proving ground for new musicians.
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Majestic in scale, these valedictory works were created at the very end of Giovanni Battista Piranesi’s life.
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Big-name artists from Scotland’s National Galleries; a mind-opening primer on African sculpture.
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Paul Rand had a lifelong allergy to text, making bold use of color and illustration that left little room for words—a radical approach for Madison Avenue at the time.
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Myra Melford’s new album, ‘Snowy Egret,’ is inspired by the ‘Memory of Fire’ trilogy by the Uruguayan author Eduardo Galeano.
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The exhibition is a celebration of individuality, with the artist using paint and ink to capture human diversity in all its guises.
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Architect and designer Michael Graves, who died Thursday, was dedicated to a deeply personal exploration of classical forms and an unflagging belief in humanistic traditions.
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Fifty years on, a look at a watershed album and its influence.
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Unearthing the excitement of archaeological discovery in a new exhibition of J. Alden Mason’s treasures.
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Similar in many ways, Josef Hoffmann and Adolf Loos had competing ideas about Modernism that developed into a new Austrian aesthetic.
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With the release of the entire 1960s series ‘Batman,’ we’re reminded that much of the show’s real draw lay in the villains.
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The new album from Ghostpoet, who eschews the term “spoken-word artist” but also can’t be categorized as a rapper, is his first with a rock quartet.
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Boris Johnson on protecting cultural heritage from Islamic State.
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While most of the major exhibits marking the 100th anniversary of World War I have focused on battles, weapons and strategies, this one offers a cultural perspective, featuring artists’, designers’ and filmmakers’ response to the war.
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In Brooklyn, Handel’s ‘Semele’ gets transported to China; Washington National Opera’s production of Wagner’s ‘The Flying Dutchman’ feels adrift.
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This show at the Museum of Biblical Art is a rare chance to see the Renaissance master’s work in the U.S.
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Cash rules everything in an exhibition of the mind-bending still lifes of the obscure Otis Kaye.
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A look at how the past reshapes the present in a show that mixes objects ranging from 5,000-year-old Sumerian statuary to 20th-century sculptures by Henry Moore.
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Jazz drummer Jack DeJohnette goes back to his roots by convening a band featuring all-star musicians from his early days in Chicago.
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A rich and satisfying sampling of creative works spawned by Myanmar’s main religion: Buddhism.
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A new artistic director takes on a classic ballet in Philadelphia.
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“The Tales of Hoffmann” has influenced directors from Cecil B. DeMille to George A. Romero to Martin Scorsese.
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Before diverging in the ’80s, the two designers’ work was closely related.
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A political thriller from a prize-winning team; the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra plays a new concert hall.
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On Björk, her recent performance at Carnegie Hall, her new album and her place in rock history.
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The 1960s style known as Brutalism has always been controversial. Now, Paul Rudolph’s Orange County Government Center is facing destructive renovations—or even demolition.
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A strong performance and improving relations between the U.S. and Cuba bode well for the future of the Havana-based Malpaso Dance Company.
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A new album that celebrates what binds old and new styles.
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Leighton House Museum is the only purpose-built artist’s studio-house open to visitors in the United Kingdom, and the site of frequent, small exhibitions.
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A look at some of today’s hit-makers shows that true doo-wop—not the manufactured-nostalgia variety—is alive and well.
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After growing up surrounded by prejudice, Gordon Parks fought against injustice with the camera as his weapon of choice.
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Remembering Clark Terry, one of the last links to the swing era, whose one-of-a-kind sound is immediately recognizable, like the speaking voice of Cary Grant or Jimmy Durante.
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Jake Heggie is arguably the world’s most popular 21st-century opera and art song composer.
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The world has changed; the law must change with it.
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The Impressions’ “People Get Ready” debuted at an important moment in the civil-rights movement, and touched musicians in all genres, awakening in them a greater purpose, writes Marc Myers.
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A restored version of Anthony Trollope’s ‘The Duke’s Children’ more deeply explores characters and emotions, and has a surprising new ending.
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What once was a Pete Lawrie Winfield solo project, Until the Ribbon Breaks has morphed into a three-piece band and is headed in the right direction.
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A new set reintroduces the public to busker, inmate and songster Lead Belly.
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An exhibition examines an engagement that endures in America’s imagination 200 years later.
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A show reveals that Piero di Cosimo was much more than an oddball who painted obscure mythological subjects.
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Three men vie for a woman’s heart during a Scottish feud; a Holocaust survivor with a trio of wives.
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A writer has her first experience with binge-watching and dives into ‘House of Cards.’
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This solo show from Carmen de Lavallade is an autobiographical look at the octogenarian’s impressive dance career.
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Two new discs revisit and revise Charlie Parker and ’70s jazz rock.
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An exhibition at the Rosenbach Museum & Library looks Wilde’s connection to a city that has always hovered on the border between daring and respectability.
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The New York Festival of Song Next series makes a point of exploring the contemporary vocal repertory.
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Fleeing Hitler, émigré musicians created a lasting Hollywood Sound.
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A gaggle of heroes returns in Joss Whedon’s effects- and wit-filled sequel.
Corrupt police square off against London’s underworld in this story of revenge, betrayal and the hierarchy of urban crime.
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Anne Hathaway plays a fighter pilot who becomes pregnant and is reassigned from Iraq to a Las Vegas base to work as a drone operator in ‘Grounded.’
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Two male law partners fall in love and leave their wives, women now bereft and enraged—all of which makes for stellar comedy.
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A documentary goes inside the missions of Nazi U-Boats, which sank hundreds of American ships.
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Tracing the latest Ebola epidemic from its beginning to its spread and devastation of West Africa.
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When it comes to Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto, a well-trodden work turns out to be not what it has seemed.
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John C. Frémont’s ‘Narratives of Exploration and Adventure’ document the West in a seamless blend of scientific rigor and literary color.
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The frescoes of the Cappella Nuova, by Luca Signorelli, influenced Michelangelo’s Sistine ceiling.
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Made by a culture that didn’t make a distinction between art for a purpose and art-for-art’s-sake, the ‘Three Villages Robe’ captures a battle and a celebration in vibrant color on buffalo hide.
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To paint ‘Snow Storm—Steam Boat off a Harbour’s Mouth,’ J.M.W. Turner said he had sailors lash him to the mast of a ship for four hours to observe the tempest.
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Herbie Hancock’s ‘Maiden Voyage’ mixes freer, modal jazz with fresh romantic lyricism and vulnerability.
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Christian Schussele’s ‘Men of Progress’ portrays revolutionaries personifying the inventiveness at the heart of the American character.
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Claudio Magris unleashes a lifetime of encyclopedic learning on the page in his magnificent ‘Danube: A Sentimental Journey From the Source to the Black Sea.’
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Edouard Manet’s ‘The Railway’ mixes modern Paris and homages to the past.
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Walter Liedtke, a Met curator and one of the victims of the Metro-North commuter rail accident on Tuesday, illuminates the central moral problem of human experience depicted in Rembrandt’s ‘Aristotle With a Bust of Homer.’
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Franz Kline’s ‘The Bridge’ uses charged brushstrokes to capture urban architecture and a dynamic industrial environment.
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Stanley Spencer’s paintings in the Sandham Memorial Chapel fuse religious faith with secular reality.
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Henry Hobson Richardson’s Allegheny County Courthouse and Jail in Pittsburgh features a broad range of cultural references, delicate touches and solid construction.
Milton Steinberg’s ‘As a Driven Leaf’ is a historical novel that examines an age-old conflict that challenges thoughtful people to this day.
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‘Four Last Songs’ (1948) by Richard Strauss suggests that dying is not the end, but rather a transition.
‘Gaslight,’ the 1944 film directed by George Cukor about treachery, thievery and murder in Victorian-era England, is a chilling look into human psychology.
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Beethoven created a virtuosic showpiece out of a mundane tune with his “Diabelli Variations.”
After a product launch goes horribly awry, Jake has to move in with his sister’s family and starts to nanny her young son
This cerebral, collagelike documentary is a moving tribute to the Nirvana frontman.
Adaline, who has eternal life, knows she’ll outlive anyone she loves so she avoids relationships—until she meets Ellis.
Mortal enemies must live together during a regional war in the Caucasus.
A disgraced journalist takes on the tale of an accused killer who has assumed his name.
A documentary tracks the new artistic director of the House of Dior as he creates his debut collection in only eight weeks.
Dark forces take over a chat room after an online video shows a teenager’s suicide.
A mature actress struggles to come to terms with her age when she is cast as an older woman in the play that launched her career.
Conflict arises between a bull-riding cowboy and his art-loving girlfriend in the latest film based on a Nicholas Sparks book.
A programmer tests the humanity of a sultry robot at a tech mogul’s estate.
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A documentary takes a look at the unlikely duo of Kit Lambert and Chris Stamp, managers who helped turn The Who into an international rock phenomenon.
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After being torn away from his owner, a mutt leads a pack of dogs in an uprising against the cruelty of humans in this film from Kornél Mundruczó.
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‘The Fast and the Furious’ franchise returns with flying cars and a tribute to Paul Walker.
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In Noah Baumbach’s new film, a couple in their 40s starts to spend time with 20-something hipsters, hoping to rekindle the excitement in their relationship.
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Before starting a prison sentence, Will Ferrell enlists the help of Kevin Hart to toughen him up for life on the inside.
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Jennifer Lawrence and Bradley Cooper star as George and Serena Pemberton, a couple trying to build a timber empire in the late 1920s.
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A documentary that celebrates the work of Brazilian photojournalist Sebastião Salgado examines the inhumanity of human beings and the possibility of redemption.
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After a Japanese woman mistakes a movie for a true story, she heads to Minnesota searching for a lost treasure.
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The sequel to ‘Divergent’ returns to a walled-in Chicago where factions struggle for survival.
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An aging rock star sets out to redeem himself after receiving a letter from a musical hero that had gone undelivered for 40 years.
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An evil, shape-shifting horror gets transmitted from one lover to another in David Robert Mitchell’s scary new film.
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Ethan Hawke’s inspiring documentary profiles the concert pianist and teacher Seymour Bernstein.
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Disney’s live-action remake of the animated classic stars Lily James as the title character and Cate Blanchett as her wicked stepmother.
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In the sequel to ‘The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel,’ new and old loves flourish while time passes all too quickly, Joe Morgenstern writes.
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A polemic pleads for skepticism and clear thinking in the face of rampant misinformation and science denial.
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Meet James Randi, the magician and escape artist who has made a life’s work of exposing fakery.
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The young boy in John Boorman’s classic “Hope and Glory” has grown up in a sequel set almost a decade later.
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A British soldier is trapped in the violence between Catholic and Protestant factions in Northern Ireland after being left behind by his unit.
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Will Smith and Margot Robbie star as romantically involved con artists in Glenn Ficarra and John Requa’s intricate caper ‘Focus.’
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Underdogs transform themselves into a top-notch cross-country team in this Disney film.
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Stress leads to revenge in these six short stories from Argentinian filmmaker Damián Szifrón.
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A group of New Zealand vampires lets a film crew into its dark rituals in Jemaine Clement and Taika Waititi’s new mockumentary.
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Colin Firth, repurposed as an action hero, squares off against Samuel L. Jackson in this comic-book adaptation.
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A look at one of the earth’s most majestic creatures, and its journey back from the brink of extinction.
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The first book of the E.L. James trilogy comes to the feature screen.
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The new space opera from the Wachowski siblings reflects the planet-size woes of the genre.
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Showtime’s 'Happyish’ shines a tiny light on the meaning of life, but snuffs it out with inchoate ravings.
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On HBO, J.K. Rowling’s angry tale of social injustice in today’s rural England, ‘A Casual Vacancy,’ blows holes in the old idylls.
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The PBS series ‘American Masters’ looks inside the famously private life of the violinist Jascha Heifetz.
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When a cabbie gets hired as the driver for a local crime boss, his new duties take a toll on his conscience and his family.
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The handsome ‘Turn’ is back on AMC, pitting George Washington’s spies against deadly redcoats.
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‘Outlander’ came back even better than before, and not because of the long wait.
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Those who seek may find new information, and inspiration, in NBC’s ‘A.D. The Bible Continues.’
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‘Wolf Hall’ is extraordinary drama, blended with the history of Henry VIII’s court and the dawn of the Protestant Reformation in England.
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This new series, starring Billy Crystal and Josh Gad, has welcome echoes of ‘Seinfeld’ and ‘Curb Your Enthusiasm.’
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HBO’s documentary about Scientology, once seen, cannot be erased from the mind. So beware.
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After a family’s black sheep son returns home to the Florida Keys, tensions flare in this dramatic new Netflix series.
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Filmmaker Lacey Schwartz was raised as a white Jewish child and only later learned the whole truth.
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USA’s thriller ‘Dig’ follows the trail of killers, religious artifacts in Jerusalem and ancient plans to save the world.
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E’s soapy farce about a British monarchy in sleazoid turmoil feels as modern as Joan Collins.
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Lesbian love and jokes apart, NBC’s new sitcom gets its best laughs from a great cast.
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This smart, entertaining police procedural from Vince Gilligan pairs a slick young FBI agent with a down-to-earth local cop.
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Four years after a bus crash killed 32 students, they start to reappear, along with other departed, in this A&E series.
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WE tv’s new couples-therapy show is not the place to look for the cheapest thrills.
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The British police drama ‘Broadchurch’ returns with a new form of suffering, and an old crime to torment detectives.
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A documentary offers a glowing portrait of Edward Snowden, who leaked huge numbers of classified documents.
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An orangutan orphanage in Sumatra teaches survival skills, like tree climbing, with the hopes of reintroducing the animals to the wild.
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Amazon’s new LA noir detective drama ‘Bosch’ gets better and better as it builds, says TV columnist Nancy deWolf Smith.
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Young idealists try to save the world from cruel cavaliers and capitalists in Acorn’s Restoration drama ‘New Worlds.’
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The CBS reboot of Neil Simon’s ‘The Odd Couple’ leaps the decades with some 21st-century humor in a comforting format.
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Viewers will root for horrible things to befall the horrible characters in ‘The Slap,’ NBC’s new show about the fallout of a grown man slapping a child.
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By the beginning of the 19th century, tuberculosis had killed one in seven of all the people who’d ever lived.
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The origin story of everyone’s favorite sleazy lawyer from ‘Breaking Bad.’
An unlikely cast of characters comes together at a seedy New Orleans motel in Lisa D’Amour’s ‘Airline Highway.’
An old woman visits her impoverished home town and agrees to help its citizens—but only if they murder the man who jilted her long ago.
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Kelsey Grammer and director Diane Paulus impress in this otherwise flawed production about the writing of J.M. Barrie’s ‘Peter Pan.’
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Revived for the first time on Broadway since 1998, this staging of the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic is sure to please.
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The two-part adaptation of Hilary Mantel’s blockbuster historical novels puts the intrigue of Henry VIII’s court onstage.
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Vanessa Hudgens stars in this sanitized revival about a Parisian teenager whose family is training her to become a courtesan.
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A teenager at a Christian ministry takes on the hypocrisies of evangelicalism with the help of a foul-mouthed puppet in ‘Hand to God.’
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Two versions of a Shakespeare favorite prove that Bedlam Theatre Company is one of the most innovative troupes at work today.
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A Thatcherite businessman hungers for a much younger upper-middle-class do-gooder consumed by liberal guilt in David Hare’s ‘Skylight.’
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