Galway Kinnell, Poet Who Followed His Own Path, Dies at 87
By DANIEL LEWIS
Mr. Kinnell won a Pulitzer Prize and an American Book Award for works that pushed deep into the heart of human experience.
The Allman Brothers Band has played an engagement nearly every year since 1989 at the Beacon Theater in Manhattan — more than 230 concerts. On Tuesday it played its last.
After 40 years, the way has been cleared to complete Mr. Welles’s unfinished final opus, “The Other Side of the Wind.”
Mr. Kinnell won a Pulitzer Prize and an American Book Award for works that pushed deep into the heart of human experience.
Brad Paisley, Luke Bryan and Dierks Bentley will perform at FarmBorough, a new country music festival coming to Randalls Island in June.
Fixing long-neglected little parks in New York is nice, but it fails to address far larger problems.
Suzan-Lori Parks’s new play reimagines a turbulent turning point in American history through a cockeyed contemporary lens.
Steve Carell, best known for comedic roles in “The Office” and the “Anchorman” movies, step into a dramatic role in “Foxcatcher.”
In “Goodbye to Language,” Jean-Luc Godard weaves narratives around a man, a woman and a dog.
Mr. Carson earned a following among devotees of independent film with his magazine journalism about movies and his own quirky films.
In Michel Faber’s novel “The Book of Strange New Things,” a missionary dispatched to a faraway planet gets desperate missives from his wife.
Emmanuel Carrère’s new book profiles Edward Limonov, the bad boy of Soviet dissident writers.
“The Death of Klinghoffer” at the Metropolitan Opera is selling well, despite protests that greeted its opening.
The Joe Angio documentary “Revenge of the Mekons” shows how a band went beyond its punk roots and explored other art forms.
“The Great Invisible,” a documentary by Margaret Brown, focuses on the everyday people whose lives were disrupted by the BP oil spill in 2010.
In “Breaking Character,” his nightclub act at 54 Below, the Broadway actor Jeremy Jordan shows a range that surpasses teen-idol appeal.
The Jerusalem Quartet, along with the pianist Inon Barnatan, played the second in a three-concert Brahms series at the 92nd Street Y.
Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch returns to the Brooklyn Academy of Music with “Kontakthof,” a work about men and women awkwardly seeking affection in a dance hall.
Nine films will be released through mid-2019, and include the Black Panther — an African superhero — and Captain Marvel, featuring a superheroine.
The network is planning 10 episodes of a music/comedy/sketch show, based on the long-running British series “Ant and Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway.”
It is expected to be the first on-air appearance for Mr. Gregory since he was replaced as host of NBC’s “Meet The Press” in August.
In “Not Afraid,” a new play by Nora Sorena Casey, a young woman’s violent fixations threaten to turn on her.
In a video report, Ms. Wong, a performance artist, discusses how marrying herself and stalking basketball star Jeremy Lin offer opportunities to question stereotypes as well as entertain.
The actress Reese Witherspoon has been playing against type in films like “Mud,” “The Good Lie,” “Inherent Vice” and “Wild.”
This is the world premiere of “In The Seams” by Saint Saviour and “Blood Oranges In the Snow” by Over the Rhine.
DiDonato, a baseball fan and a Kansas City native, was first asked if she could appear in Tuesday’s Game 6, but she said that she was committed to teaching a master class.
A special section highlights upcoming events and exhibitions, and surveys new developments in prominent museums.
How to wade through the crush of culture coming your way this season? Here’s a guide to 100 events that have us especially excited, in order of appearance.
At the very end, this HBO period crime drama arrives at the beginning.
Noah Solloway wants to write about “the death of the American pastoral.”
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