New perspectives on how history is made
Entertainment's continued interest in the Holocaust.
And that must mean "The Nutcracker."
Presenting "Pericles," one of Shakespeare's most obscure 'problem plays.'
Dickensian London, that is, in a new revival of "Oliver!"
Did you know that Dr. Ruth, America's favorite sex therapist, is a Holocaust survivor?
"Witness to the World" asks.
This off-Broadway play is something of a small miracle.
Gay life was not much fun under communism.
"After Midnight" is a winner for bringing Harlem’s Depression jubilant night life back to life.
As it turns out, the movie owes much to Douglass.
It may be an oldie, but it's still a goodie.
This is not your grandpa’s Las Vegas.
The new revival of "The Model Apartment" at 59E59 Theaters is a bumpy road.
Fox's "Sleepy Hollow" isn't true to Washington Irving's story by any means, but it still (kind of) accomplishes what Irving set out to do.
"Lady Day" is a delight for historians.
Plays-into-movies are becoming ubiquitous around the world.
Food author Suzanne Martinson on the life and times of Elsie Henderson, longtime cook at Frank Lloyd Wright's signature house.
A trip to the seventeenth century.
Why spin films into stage plays? There are lots of reasons...
"The Butler" is a feel-good liberal history of civil rights, but it encourages complacency.
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