Peter Galbraith built a career in statecraft, pursuing a humanitarian foreign policy despite a very immodest temperament.
Mohamed Jalloh and his family fled rebels in Sierra Leone for the relative safety of New York. Then the danger caught up with them.
Derek Jeter’s contract is up, and G.M. Brian Cashman is in a delicate situation.
Elizabeth Warren could be Obama’s best hope to get the masses back on his side.
Schumer to be Dem Savior?
Our roundup of news from around the city.
The persistence of long-attention-span theater.
From a couch in the Soho Grand Hotel, James Woods foretells doom.
Kicking off the Oscars campaign season with the DreamWorks Animation chief.
A language dork finally falls in love with rap.
The artists who flowed so fine they turned Old School rhymes into poetry.
With one breathtaking, breakneck 30-minute monologue, he steals the season.
The brilliant blunt force of The Scottsboro Boys.
Vanessa Redgrave and James Earl Jones drive an angrier Miss Daisy.
Wings soars with Jan Maxwell.
We asked him to walk us through the monumental, three-dimensional Madison Square Park installation.
In both Fair Game and Client 9, we watch shadowy figures practice the art of the public takedown.
How Weezer learned to love their most interesting album.
A Quiet Place, Leonard Bernstein’s opera of suburban angst, finally makes it to New York.
Bill Clinton’s campaign-season tour de force is a reminder of what might have been.
Impressive Thai in the former Cru space.
Keith Haring’s children’s chair, a kitchen survival kit, and more.
“People will tell me to put a shirt on, but I feel freer with just two buttons.”
Sexier cuts and colors push the blazer way beyond biz-cas.
When identical apartments battle for buyers.
Eleven great chefs share their families’ secret recipes.
Readers sound off on Sarah Palin, hipsters, and Newsweek.
Our deliberately oversimplified guide to who falls where on our taste hierarchies.