Like his frequent collaborator Stephen Sondheim, Broadway director James Lapine usually does the brainy stuff. But his new show is simplicity itself.
Thirteen years ago, the Central Park jogger case gave a new face and vocabulary to the city’s social breakdown.
Equal parts inspired draftsman and obsessive nature enthusiast, Walton Ford populates his stunning watercolors with carnivorous birds and beasts.
Harvey Weinstein, Mary Boone, Cindi Leive, Karenna Gore Schiff, and more . . .
Auto Focus, a moralistic look into the sad, sordid life of Bob Crane
A mediocre Man of No Importance from Terrence McNally; the Abbey Theatre’s Medea is accessible – but overacted
Dave Eggers’s sophomore effort: slightly sophomoric, highly funny
The earnest, academic Museum of Sex opens up shop, bringing all things naughty — yes, including porn — into the nothing’s-shocking mainstream
Striking sets and costumes can’t save Philip Glass’s tired Galileo Galilei
“Perfect Acts of Architecture” captures an inspired moment in design history
TNT’s The Big Time recalls a former — and in some ways better — era in TV history
What Martha has in common with Hugh Hefner and with Frank (“My Way”) Sinatra — and why she should put her empire in her daughter’s charge
In New Jersey, Lautenberg and Forrester are fighting the last war — the 2000 presidential election
Bally golf shoes, a Car Design Yearbook, and animal rubber bands
Scene-stealing pendants for under $100