Kate Baldwin opened her new show, “She Loves Him,” at Feinstein’s at Loews Regency on Tuesday.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMThe New York Pops, with Judy Garland’s daughter Lorna Luft and guest singers, tries the impossible: to recreate Garland’s famous 1961 Carnegie Hall concert.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PM“Stage Door Canteen: Broadway Responds to World War II,” a Lyrics & Lyricist show at the 92nd Street Y, was informative history and a breezy evocation of national solidarity.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMMr. Martin’s credits included “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,” “The Boy Next Door,” and “The Trolley Song.”
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMNew albums by Brian Wilson, John Mellencamp, Trace Adkins, Esperanza Spalding and Boris & Ian Astbury.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:58PMMegan Hilty, known for roles on the TV show “Smash” and in an Encores! concert of “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes,” brings her touch to Café Carlyle.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 04:21PMThe retrospective looks at the works of the Argentine filmmaker.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:00PMThis revue at the 92nd St Y smoothly accomplishes what Depression-era movie musicals did so skillfully: whisked you away to a realm of pure entertainment and made difficult look easy!
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:12PMAs promised, there was plenty of singing and dancing in this show at the 92nd Street Y, reminiscent of Berlin’s movie musicals.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 12:02PMMs. McDonald’s concert put the spotlight on relatively obscure songs from well-known Broadway shows.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 04:52PMThe actress and singer, who won a Tony for her role in “Hedwig and the Angry Inch,” sang songs by Led Zeppelin and Elton John.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:00PMThe singer, who made a comeback in New York clubs after retiring from musical acting to raise her sons, was 90.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 08:12PMThis drama based on real-life traces the legal battle by Ms. Mirren’s character to regain possession of a priceless canvas stolen from her family by the Nazis 60 years earlier.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:23PMAt 87, in the twilight of her career, Ms. Cook’s concert at the packed Appel Room drew audience members who came to pay tribute and to bask in her still-radiant presence.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 03:02PMIn “The Last Five Years,” adapted from the play of the same name, a novelist and an actress grow apart.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 06:42PMJudy Kuhn sang music from three generations of the Richard Rodgers dynasty as part of Lincoln Center’s American Songbook series.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 04:37PMStephen Sondheim and Steve Reich chatted and compared notes onstage at a Lincoln Center American Songbook concert that illustrated their mutual interests.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:26PMBilly Porter fuses Broadway, pop and gospel in his performances at the Appel Room, part of the American Songbook series.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 03:29PMAl Pacino’s tempered wild-man performance in “The Humbling” is one of his strongest in over a decade.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:57PMAs it begins a 16th season, Lincoln Center’s American Songbook series has its most adventurous offerings yet.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:26PMCheyenne Jackson was open and upbeat as he sang standards and contemporary material at Café Carlyle.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:23PMDavid Loud conducts an erudite survey of collaborations by Stephen Sondheim and Harold Prince.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 03:57PMMary Testa shows she can belt à la Ethel Merman and intertwine the music of devastation with that of utter joy.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:42PMCabaret is alive, stirring up excitement and receiving transfusions — thanks to young newcomers and old rockers — but no one can honestly say it’s in great health.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:20PM“Into the Woods,” Rob Marshall’s Disney screen adaptation of the Stephen Sondheim-James Lapine musical, is a mash-up of Grimm fairy tales viewed through a post-Freudian prism.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:39PMIn her new show at 54 Below, Laura Osnes features songs from roles she never got to play.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 04:53PMLiv Ullmann’s version of Strindberg’s “Miss Julie” features Jessica Chastain and Colin Farrell as class-bound lovers repelled and attracted by each other in a battle of the sexes.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 10:00AMAnnaleigh Ashford juggles a cabaret act at 54 Below with her Broadway role in “You Can’t Take It With You” and her TV role as Betty in “Masters of Sex.”
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 04:48PMPatti LuPone’s “Faraway Places Part Two,” at 54 Below, is the sequel to her show there in 2012.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 04:14PMIn “Breaking Character,” his nightclub act at 54 Below, the Broadway actor Jeremy Jordan shows a range that surpasses teen-idol appeal.
SOURCE: The New York Times Subscription at 05:45PMThere were fewer chanteuses onstage at this year’s New York Cabaret Convention than in the past, and a lot more male performers.
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