“The Thanksgiving Play” is a comedy on an awkward subject, and a sendup of liberal good intentions. The staff writer Vinson Cunningham speaks with the playwright Larissa FastHorse.
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Author: The New Yorker
Donald and Elon Pull Strings
But who’s playing whom?
“The Franchise” Gives Hollywood the “Veep” Treatment
Satirizing the superhero-blockbuster business, HBO’s new comedy finds mostly easy targets, but eventually something more.
Faustian Bargains in “Death Becomes Her” and “Burnout Paradise”
The audience gets what it paid for in both the musical adaptation of the 1992 film, with Megan Hilty and Jennifer Simard, and a new show about the treadmill of life.
Dalí, Basquiat, Haring, and Hockney at Luna Luna
Also: Interpol’s “Antics” turns twenty, Kyle Abraham fills Drill Hall, new work by the photographer Jeff Wall, and more.
A Novelist’s Unnerving Memoir of Disordered Eating
In “My Good Bright Wolf,” Sarah Moss recounts a dangerous romance with self-deprivation.
“Family Romance: John Singer Sargent and the Wertheimers,” Reviewed
Asher Wertheimer was a Jewish tycoon who asked John Singer Sargent to paint him. The results are strange, slippery—and some of the artist’s best work.
Can Shostakovich Ever Escape Stalin’s Shadow?
Endless debate over whether the ending of the composer’s Fifth Symphony represents a capitulation to Soviet demands or a secret dissent obscures a more tantalizing possibility.
Frank Auerbach’s Raw Truths
“I find it all very difficult,” the late German-born British artist said, and few painters have done as much to show the struggle of creative endeavor.
“Wicked” and “Gladiator II” Offer Nostalgic, Half-Satisfying Showdowns
With a musical return to Oz and a bloody epic of ancient Rome, Hollywood studios double down on blockbuster spectacle.
Why Josh Brolin Loves James Joyce
On the occasion of his new memoir, the “Dune” actor reflects on some of his formative reading experiences.
The Fantasy of Cozy Tech
From the “cozy gaming” trend to a new generation of A.I. companions, our devices are trying to swathe us in a digital and physical cocoon.
The Best Books We’ve Read in 2024 So Far
Our editors and critics review notable new fiction, nonfiction, and poetry.
The Complex Politics of Tribal Enrollment
How did the U.S. government become involved in “adjudicating Indianness”?
El Museo del Barrio Offers a Timely Triennial of Latino Art
The unique history of El Museo has allowed it to be at the vanguard of what is now more widely accepted as the purpose of museums.
Why Do We Talk This Way?
Technology is dramatically changing political speech, rewarding quantity and variety over the neat messages of the past.
A Visit to Planet Koren
A new exhibition celebrates the work of the late cartoonist Edward Koren.
Briefly Noted
“Women’s Hotel,” “Under the Eye of the Big Bird,” “By the Fire We Carry,” and “Alexander von Humboldt.”
What’s the Difference Between a Rampaging Mob and a Righteous Protest?
From the French Revolution to January 6th, crowds have been heroized and vilified. Now they’re a field of study.
Javier Mariscal’s “Desk with a View”
Sudden glimpses of urban artistry.
Restaurant Review: Upstairs and Downstairs at Clemente Bar
A new lounge above Eleven Madison Park offers refined plant-based bites and beverages while leaving fine-dining social hierarchies intact.
Bearing Witness to American Exploits
Peter van Agtmael’s images of war and domestic strife are arresting and almost cinematically spare, but it is the careful narrative arc of his new book, “Look at the U.S.A.,” that deepens the viewer’s experience.
“Terrorists in Retirement” Brings Wartime Traumas Back to Life
With in-depth interviews and startling reënactments, the director Mosco Boucault details the anguish and the heroism of a mainly Jewish group of French Resistance fighters.
“Give Me Carmelita Tropicana!” and “Gatz” Beat On Against the Current
The playwright Branden Jacobs-Jenkins and the performance artist Alina Troyano summon downtown’s wild spirit, and Elevator Repair Service revives its signature hit.
How R.E.M. Created Alternative Music
In the cultural wasteland of the Reagan era, they showed that a band could break through to mass appeal without being cheesy, or nostalgic, or playing hair metal.
Sam Gold’s “Romeo + Juliet” Is Shakespeare for the Youth
Gold, a celebrated Shakespeare director, designed his theatre production for a young audience. “It’s loud. I’m willing to hear the complaints, because I have risk tolerance,” he said.
“Emilia Pérez” Is an Incurious Musical About a Trans Drug Lord
The performances of Karla Sofía Gascón and Zoe Saldaña bring energy and emotion, but the movie never gets beyond its splashy surfaces.
Pope Francis, the Cardinals, and “Conclave”
The Vatican’s Synod on Synodality was nothing like papal gatherings of cinematic lore, but it clearly reflects Francis’s view of what the Church should be.
Restaurant Review: Bridges
Bridges, a chic new restaurant from a former Estela chef, offers indulgence through restraint, with eye-opening results.
The Amazing, Disappearing Johnny Carson
Carson pioneered a new style of late-night hosting—relaxed, improvisatory, risk-averse, and inscrutable.
“A Real Pain” Fails to Stay in Its Discomfort Zone
In Jesse Eisenberg’s film, a shticky bromance obscures a thoughtful attempt to probe the legacy of the Holocaust.
Charles Ives, Connoisseur of Chaos
Celebrating the composer’s hundred-and-fiftieth birthday, at a festival in Bloomington, Indiana.
Helen, Help Me: What If You’re Dining with a Jerk?
Our restaurant critic offers advice on Martini drinking, cutting through restaurant hype, and staying on servers’ good sides.
Soccer Mommy’s Visceral Chronicle of Loss
On the new album “Evergreen,” the artist Sophie Allison makes sadness come alive and transform.
Quick, Affordable Sushi That’s Still a Cut Above
At Sendo, a Tokyo-style sushi-ya in midtown, the food’s level of sophistication well surpasses its price point.
The Decline of the Working Musician
You used to be able to make a living playing in a band. A new book, “Band People,” charts how that changed.
“Disclaimer” Is a Baffling Misfire from a Great Auteur
Alfonso Cuarón’s foray into television is a work of such vacuity that even Cate Blanchett can’t salvage it.
Ryan Murphy’s Latest Era of Cynical Hits
In “Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story,” the astoundingly prolific showrunner melds his modes as provocateur and clumsy social-justice warrior, with mixed results.
Is Matt Walsh Trying to Make “Am I Racist?” the “Borat” of the Right?
In his work with the Daily Wire and in a new movie, the conservative podcaster and activist tries to expose the hypocrisies of the left.