document.write('
NYT > Arts
Shakespeare Troupe Plans Residency in New York
The Royal Shakespeare Company will hold court in Manhattan for an unprecedented six-week, five-play residency inside the Park Avenue Armory.
Publishers Win a Bout in E-Book Price Fight
Publishers have managed to take some control — at least temporarily — of how much consumers pay for their content.
Identity Found: On West Side via West Bank
Najla Said’s “Palestine,” a one-woman Off Broadway show, is a coming-of-age story about Ms. Said’s journey to become an Arab-American on her own terms.
A World of Words Reinvented in Pictures
The initial print runs for a graphic-novel adaptation of “Twilight” and a new graphic novel by Janet Evanovich are staggering.
Video Game Review | Dante’s Inferno: You Read It in Class; Now You Can Play It on Your Console
Dante’s Inferno, the video game, is more reminiscent of the God of War games than it is of the “Divine Comedy,” the epic poem that inspired it.
Music Review: Imaginary Soundtracks for Two Silent Warhol Films
The Unsound Festival, an electronic-music smorgasbord that began last week and continues through Sunday, gave two Warhol shorts imaginary soundtracks.
Music Review | Juilliard Baroque: How Flexible Are You? This Bach’s a Good Test
In its second outing, part of the Music Before 1800 series at Corpus Christi Church on Sunday, Juilliard Baroque showed an entirely different face.
Books of The Times: Delivering Bad News and Bearing It
Sarah Blake has coaxed forth a book that hits hard and pushes buttons expertly.
Television Review | \'Past Life\': Reincarnated, and Now the Detective Work Begins
“Past Life,” a Fox series that makes its debut on Tuesday night, is the latest drama to feature an empathetic heroine talking to the dead to help them with their unfinished business.
TV Sports: Super Bowl Dethrones ‘M*A*S*H’ as Most-Watched Show in History
Sunday’s Super Bowl eclipsed the final episode of “M*A*S*H” to become the most watched television show in history.
Dance: 2 Coasts and 2 Troupes: Contrasting Visions of a Well-Trod Ballet
The threads that bind movement to music are nowhere more various or more subtle than in “The Sleeping Beauty.”
Music Review | George London Foundation: 2 Singers, One Experienced and One Not
On Sunday the promising young tenor Sean Panikkar joined the coloratura soprano June Anderson for an eclectic program ranging from Beethoven to Weill.
Television Review | \'Frontline: Flying Cheap\': Up in the Air, With Frayed Safety Nets
“Flying Cheap,” Tuesday’s “Frontline” on PBS, revisits the February 2009 crash of a commuter flight outside Buffalo and surveys problems within the regional airline system.
Music Review | Delta Spirit: Charting an Earnest Course Between the Rah-Rah and the Reflective
Hectoring and uplift enjoy an uneasy truce in the music of Delta Spirit.
Music Review | Fireworks Ensemble: Lou Reed’s ‘Machine’: Now More Strings, Less Metal
A real-time, chamber-music performance of an inhumanly generated composition: that was Lou Reed’s “Metal Machine Music” as played by the Fireworks Ensemble at Miller Theater.
');