In Behnaz Sarafpour’s fall collection, where the ballet gown meets the forties cocktail dress,slinky and sexy are out, pretty and polished are in.
And blues are, too. Designer Miles Redd applies his genius for color to transform two young Manhattanites’ apartments.
Readers sound off on partisan politics, liberalism, and more.
A mutual-fund giant let Canary Capital turn back time to create a no-risk, all-profit paradise. Next up for the perps: jail.
Hospitals used to enjoy unfettered access to your medical records, but no more.
Dan and Allison are doing everything they can to remain friends. But is it really possible to end a marriage without destroying the relationship?
A Village dress shop makes a highly theatrical debut.
Your fall-wardrobe checklist probably already contains the essentials. For the finishing touch, we found the perfect shoe.
We emptied our wardrobes to create this guide to the city’s best consignment shops.
I know it used to be possible to have a mirror re-silvered—does anyone still do this?
Move over, South Beach: Florida’s grand old dames are back.
To Be and to Have, a documentary about a single-room schoolhouse in rural France, offers up a poignant vision of how a teacher can shape lives.
John Simon reviews Matt & Ben.
Jonathan Lethem’s new novel is located somewhere on a grid defined by race relations, a comic book, and spaldeens. But where, exactly?
As the baseball playoffs loom, a new documentary revisits the trade that set off one of the most intense rivalries in all of sports.
Laura Shapiro reviews the latest from Compagnie Felix Ruckert.
An artist whose witty Conceptual gems from the Vietnam era to the present transcend the merely absurd to reveal deeper truths.
If the over-the-top theatrics of Rocco’s reality show make you crave old-fashioned restaurant professionalism, the River Café hits the spot.
Your options are more than fair at the New York Is Book Country Festival.
A quintet by the late, great John Frankenheimer, at Film Forum.
Alec Baldwin, Sofia Coppola, Bonnie Fuller…
Like her mom and dad before her, the former First Daughter is taking the New York stage.
Ed Klein claims he was Jackie’s friend. So why did her lawyer tell him to buzz off?
Snapple paid $166 million to be the city’s “official” drink. How else could New York co-brand itself?
Madonna joins the ranks of pop-music artists turned shining children’s-literature stars.
D.C.’s gossiper-in-chief takes on “Page Six.”
How to turn your old T-shirts into … underwear.
Mario Batali teaches single men how to cook. Lesson No. 1? Don’t do it like Rocco!
Finding an Edie Sedgwick is harder than you’d think.