‘Saturday Night Live’: 11 Defining Political Sketches
Since the 1970s, the late-night institution has offered up definitive impersonations of American presidents and other politicians. Here are its most memorable political sketches.
Read More
Since the 1970s, the late-night institution has offered up definitive impersonations of American presidents and other politicians. Here are its most memorable political sketches.
Saoirse Ronan gives another stunning performance in a story about an alcoholic in search of healing.
The artist for the fifth Facade Commission created Cubist sculptures that look forward and backward. The question is what more the Met can do going forward.
A limp body-swapping comedy doesn’t really know what makes its subgenre so funny.
In leaked phone calls home, Russian soldiers grapple with the war they’re waging. This new documentary sets the calls’ swagger and anguish against images of the invasion’s devastation.
Seventy-five years after the artist’s death, the grotesque masquerades he painted aren’t so far from the manipulated faces of the present day.
In what could be the last prime-time showdown of the 2024 campaign, the supporting players performed against type.
On her second album, the internet-native Irish songwriter makes a complicated relationship sound “squonky.”
David Henry Hwang’s 2007 play, now in a fine Broadway revival, is a pointed critique of identity, masquerading as a mockumentary.
Her intricate phrasing and live improvisational skills made her a cornerstone for artists of all sorts. Listen to songs chosen by 10 musicians and writers who consider her a north star.
The second season ended in a whirlwind of fire and steel, darkness and light, capping an eight-episode run with many ups and downs.
A dispute between Adria English, who has accused Mr. Combs of sexual misconduct, and her lawyers is the latest twist in the civil litigation the music mogul is facing.
Alex Katz admired a Mark di Suvero sculpture and gave it to the Brooklyn Museum. It now has pride of place in the museum’s 200th anniversary celebration.
This week in Newly Reviewed, Martha Schwendener covers Dennis Kardon’s wonderfully strange paintings, Klara Liden’s green vistas and Sheryl Sutton’s mesmerizing movements.
In this travel documentary, two parents take their children on a spectacular world tour before a rare genetic condition may cause blindness.