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At Broadway’s Studio 54, Jean Smart takes a break from winning Emmy Awards as a sharply dissatisfied comedian on “Hacks” to ...
Richard Ellmann’s “James Joyce” is a classic of literary biography. In “Ellmann’s Joyce,” Zachary Leader delves into the ...
Six jurors were selected at random to be alternate jurors. The remaining 12 jurors, seven women and five men, will decide the ...
The rapper talks escaping west London’s badlands, his very British brand of hip-hop, and showing his vulnerable side on his ...
Ulysses must be the best novel almost nobody has read, and even fewer have finished. To quote the judge in America who ruled ...
There are a surprising number of dads in the DC Universe, and while we wish there are all amazing and loving, the simple ...
Open Sally Rooney’s new novel “Intermezzo” and, on the first page, a character says: “Hello, Peter.” Except, as this is a ...
Stephen Graham, star and co-creator of Adolescence, finds it slightly trickier to do his weekly food shop since the four-part ...
This is The Takeaway from today's Morning Brief, which you can sign up to receive in your inbox every morning along with: The chart of the day What we're watching What we're reading Economic data ...
The star has revealed when her new album Man’s Best Friend is set to drop – but it’s the cover image that has everyone ...
In "Great Black Hope," a young, gay, Black man is reeling even before his socialite roommate is found dead. NPR's Ayesha Rascoe asks Rob Franklin about race, class, addiction, and his debut novel.
We’re not trees,” says Noel Edmonds in his new TV series. “We can move.” Hard to argue with that as a rationale, yet ...