When Mark Consuelos Wants to Escape New York, He Goes Here
“The midcentury architecture is fascinating. It’s also a place where I’m outside almost every waking hour of the day.”
“The midcentury architecture is fascinating. It’s also a place where I’m outside almost every waking hour of the day.”
Mark Rosenblatt's Broadway play, starring John Lithgow as the British children's book author, draws from Dahl's comments over the years.
Five of the show's stars strutted and prowled amid the desks of T Magazine.
"It's raw, real, sensitive, strong, vulnerable, righteous, romantic, genius," said the "Bridgerton" actor, who stars in the new film "You, Me & Tuscany."
The actor Harry Melling shed his image as Harry's cruel cousin, Dudley Dursley " and his clothes " to star in the queer romance "Pillion."
The immersive adaptation of Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical is a hit, with some people coming back a dozen times since it began performances last summer.
Times Cooking's Pizza Interview series introduces a note of nostalgia to encourage stars to open up.
The filmmaker Chloé Zhao and the novelist-turned-screenwriter Maggie O'Farrell explained the changes they made in the tale of Shakespeare, his wife and their son.
For one writer, putting together her annual roundup of streaming holiday movies requires open-mindedness " and a high tolerance for candy-coated clichés.
It is "the actual reason all of us crazy folks go back to the theater," said the actor, who has joined the Season 2 cast of "Nobody Wants This."
"I wanted to tell a story that encompassed the gender spectrum," said Tonatiuh, who transformed his body to play the queer window dresser Luis Molina.
The fund-raiser drew celebrities, rock stars and designers, though its red carpet and dinner was boycotted by the company's dancers who are fighting for pay increases.
The recognizable masthead has been portrayed in a Betty Boop musical on Broadway, a Marvel movie and many other creative works.
Alex Marshall, a European culture reporter for The New York Times, has turned a music obsession into an arts journalism career.
The sunny 15-year-old dancer-turned-actress is about as far as you can get from the role she's best known for: a deadly A.I. doll.
Also in the lineup: "Bat Boy: The Musical" and a production of "The Wild Party."
The national tour production will haunt the Palace Theater for 13 weeks, beginning Oct. 8.
A.O. Scott, who reviewed movies for The New York Times for more than two decades, is now a roving critic for the Book Review.
The new musical is based on Josefina López's original play and the 2002 film adaptation that starred America Ferrera.
Back on Broadway for "Old Friends," the actress reflects on the art she saw with Sondheim and the delights of the High Line and Central Park.
Branden Kazen-Maddox makes time for mud massages, meditation and aerial hoop adventures.
The new play, set 24 years before the start of the Netflix series, combines lavish spectacle with a cast of familiar characters.
At the production company Film4 he was instrumental in financing British movies. In New York, his goal is to attract a younger, more diverse audience.
Jason Zinoman started writing about comedy for The New York Times in 2011, when the world of stand-up and improv looked a little different.