Matthew Rhys, of ‘Widow’s Bay,’ Is on a Boat. Barely.
By Alexis Soloski and Blaise Cepis
The star of this seafaring horror-comedy, which wraps up Season 1 on Wednesday, also spends his downtime on the water.
Read More →By Travis Diehl
The artist’s latest videos and drawings stem from physical and mental exercises and are largely improvised in his studio, with raw and vulnerable results.
By Lewis Gordon
By asking players to perform repetitive labor in mundane settings, game designers are delivering relatable twists on the tycoon genre.
By Adam Nagourney and Paola Chapdelaine
Stearns, a longtime principal at American Ballet Theater, has stepped down. He talks about being pushed to leave and the pains and boons of growing older.
By Jeffrey Arlo Brown
Formed by siblings who grew up playing together, the Hagen Quartet is finishing a farewell tour with an unforced, casual goodbye.
By Julia Jacobs
As the Trump administration seeks to move forward with renovations at the center, a judge has asked for its programming calendar.
By Gia Kourlas and George Etheredge
Sharleen Chidiac, a choreographer and the effervescent lead singer of Voyeur, looks at ambition and freedom in her hybrid new work: a punk musical.
By Joshua Barone
Kaija Saariaho’s final opera, a premiere by Ellen Reid and a multitasking performance by Barbara Hannigan are among the highlights.
By Roslyn Sulcas
The Paris Opera production of “Ercole Amante” (“Hercules in Love”), a rediscovered 1707 work by the female composer Antonia Bembo, leans into contemporary themes of coercion and consent.
By Walker Mimms and Guarionex Rodriguez
The French sound artist Céleste Boursier-Mougenot creates an unlikely symphony by setting singing bowls bobbing at the Park Avenue Armory.
By Matt Stevens
For an upcoming story, we want fans to talk to us about the journey they have been on with Swift through the years and how they feel about her big day.
By Michael Paulson
The show, which revisits the story of a marmalade-loving bear, plans to open next April at the Hirschfeld Theater in New York.
By J. Hoberman
Anthology Film Archives is screening Chris Jolly’s restored 2001 lo-fi indie film twice nightly.
By Lindsay Zoladz
Hear songs from Angélique Kidjo, Mavis Staples, Sharp Pins and more.
By John S.W. MacDonald
She brought the plucky Lilo to life in the popular animated film series, and unnerved viewers as the child villain Samara in the horror film “The Ring.”
By Clay Risen
A former monk who was also Uma Thurman’s father, he made sure Buddhism retained its intellectual and spiritual rigor as it spread through the West.
By Derrick Bryson Taylor
Some of the show’s leadership made harassing statements about the writer’s race and sexuality, the lawsuit says. CBS said it had been unable to find support for the allegations.
By Reggie Ugwu
The Grammy-nominated musician pleaded guilty to third-degree rape after a woman told the police she was beaten and assaulted at his home in 2022.
By Melissa Kirsch
A memory workout, an endless playlist and an antidote to worry.
By Jonathan Kandell
In books like “The Cheese and the Worms,” he helped push beyond the story of great events and leaders, entering the minds and hearts of peasants.
By Trish Bendix
President Trump “promised he would drain the swamp,” Jimmy Kimmel said. “Instead, he spent 14 million of our dollars building a new one.”
By Richard Sandomir
As a child, he discovered that his father — and therefore he and his siblings — had been passing for white. For the rest of his life, he identified as Black.
By Laura Collins-Hughes
Anna D. Shapiro revives Eric Bentley’s play about the House Un-American Activities Committee’s investigation of the entertainment industry.
By Lise Funderburg and Hannah Yoon
In the spirit of 1776, these shipwrights, printers and textile workers are commemorating George Washington’s legacy through 18th-century techniques.
By Trish Bendix
“Of course it’s the Knicks, so they won’t really show up until the second half,” the host Jimmy Fallon said.
By Julia Jacobs
Ms. Richard, a singer who once worked with the music mogul, accused him of creating an abusive work environment. The judge said her claims came too late.
By Victor Mather
Performers were tested by the unexpected during a ballet production in Turkey.
By Ben Sisario
The nonprofit, established by Congress a decade ago and separate from President Trump’s Freedom 250, will bring Smashing Pumpkins and other acts to Los Angeles on July 4.
By Giovanni Russonello
His song “Mannenberg” became the unofficial anthem of the country’s fight against apartheid, with Nelson Mandela calling him “our Mozart.”
By Richard Sandomir
A talented musician, he lied when asked by Lionel Richie, the lead singer, if he played bass. Then he taught himself how, and was essential to the band’s success.
By Brian Seibert
Thanks to a $50 million grant, a new festival has been born. Kyle Abraham helps to curate the first edition, which is part of the center’s Summer of Dance.
By J. D. Biersdorfer
Books about pivotal moments in America’s past are often transformed into films or television shows. Try this quiz to see if you can identify these five adaptations.
By Alexandra Starr and Lucía Vázquez
Tambores may not be as widely known as other Latin dances like merengue and salsa, but that is starting to change with the exodus of millions of Venezuelans.
By Julia Jacobs and Emmanuel Morgan
A day after the National Symphony Orchestra played perhaps its final notes at the Kennedy Center for years, mixed martial artists brawled outside the White House.
By Elisabeth Vincentelli
The Oscar winner and Josh O’Connor star in a National Theater production of Shakespeare’s tragedy. Other picks include Matthew López’s “The Inheritance.”
By Hester Underhill
Father Dionysios Tabakis has never played a live concert, but after his first album became a word-of-mouth hit, he’ll be performing at a U.S. festival this summer.
By The New York Times
The first half of the year had few big, buzzy hits. But there were some nice surprises (“Widow’s Bay”) and returning favorites (“The Comeback”).
By Max Lakin
Members of the Art Workers’ Coalition fought for a fairer and more equitable business for themselves. Their battles resonate to this day.