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Edward D. Hoch, Writer of Over 900 Mystery Stories, Is Dead at 77 For the last 35 years, Mr. Hoch was a fixture of Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, which published a story of his every month from 1973 until his death.
Fourth Title Snatched From Fourth No-Trump It is unusual in any sport for a player to win an event three years in a row.
Dashing Through a Sex Comedy by Machiavelli (Yes, That Machiavelli) This broad, straining production holds an undeniable curiosity value but doesn’t capitalize on it.
First Symphonies: One Agitated, One Light The Philadelphia Orchestra, led by Christoph Eschenbach, brought Leonard Bernstein’s “Jeremiah” Symphony to Carnegie Hall on Tuesday night, surrounding it with music by ...
Reflections on Time and the Relationships It May Never Heal “Connoisseurs of Chaos,” which had its premiere Tuesday night at the Joyce Theater and completes Karole Armitage's “The Dream Trilogy,” begun in 2004.
All Sides Now of a Seasoned Performer At Tuesday’s opening performance of a six-week engagement at the Café Carlyle Judy Collins's voice, clear and vibrato free but inflected with delicate little shivers, stole ...
If They’ve Changed the Locks, Is It Really Home? When a character who is talked about but never seen is the most interesting figure in a drama, is that a problem? It is for Chad Beckim’s new play.
Mead-Drinking, Gruel-Eating, Sandal-Wearing, Reality-Fleeing Family Guy Tod Wodicka’s protagonist is a medieval re-enactor trying to escape the modern world. But this debut is more than an extended cheap shot.
Met Opera Abandons Plan for On-Demand Telecasts The Met said theater operators had expressed worry that the telecasts would cut into live audiences.
No Map Needed for Reality-Altering Trip Richard Foreman’s phantasmagorical new show is as disciplined as a Balanchine ballet.
In Real Time, Amy Winehouse’s Deeper Descent There was nothing amusing, and barely any surprise, in Amy Winehouse’s recent, notorious and possibly inadvertent public appearance: on a video released by an English tabloid, The ...
Architect’s Next Prize: Michigan Museum Zaha Hadid, who won the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2004, has been chosen to design the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University in East Lansing.
Prince of Intensity With a Lightness of Touch Heath Ledger was serious and smart enough to be suspicious of deploying his charisma too easily or cheaply.
That Mushroom Cloud? They’re Just Svejking Around An art prank by a Czech collective has highlighted an old Czech tradition of tomfoolery that is a particular matter of national cultural pride.
Pete Candoli, Trumpeter and Studio Musician, Dies at 84 Pete Candoli was a jazz trumpeter who made his mark as a high-note specialist in the big-band era and went on to become one of the busiest studio musicians in Hollywood.
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