Eddie Izzard, London’s most outrageous comic, takes a serious turn in the Broadway revival of Joe Egg.
For Amanda Robb, the murder of her uncle Bart was more than just a personal tragedy: It was a public spectacle, a political flashpoint.
WITH DEBORAH SCHOENEMANSarah Kozer, Steven Schragis, Ross Bleckner, Stephen Schwarzman and more!
Prime-time-TV czars Jeff Zucker and Susan Lyne get a reality check they never bargained for
New York deserves a crack at meting out post-9/11 justice
Sex-toy salons are the twenty-first-century version of the Tupperware
Webby Hogan sneakers, Paul Smith watches, and custom-fitted ties
Sharp structured jackets for spring
Off-season deals in the Caribbean
Bend It Like Beckham takes a teen tale to the soccer field, Bollywood-style; Jonas Akerlund stylizes Spun to death
Take Me Out elevates locker-room talk (and full frontal nudity) to an art form; Cynthia Nixon shines in String Fever
The Whitney’s high-IQ Diller + Scofidio retrospective delivers modernist design with a dash of humor
Jefferson is a little neighborhood spot with surprisingly expansive cuisine
Television critic John Leonard reviews The Great American Songbook, Frozen Impact, Mafia Doctor, Normal, and If I Should Fall From Grace
Frenchies may be Steve Martin’s new best friends—but when these “It” dogs hail from Moscow, watch out!
French châteaux? Asian jungles? Surely NYC has some reality-TV locales—and stars—of its own.
Mayor Bloomberg’s rubbing voters the wrong way, but not because he’s a billionaire. Blame his Johns Hopkins education.
Michael Jackson paid 150 grand to get Spielberg. Who would you hex?
A generation reared on cynicism suddenly discovers political earnestness.
Norah Jones on life post-Grammys—and miniskirts.