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L.A. Phil names Kim Noltemy as president and CEO

Kim Noltemy takes over as president and CEO of the L.A. Phil from Chad Smith, who left for the Boston Symphony Orchestra last fall. She arrives from the Dallas Symphony Assn.


Review: Ralph Fiennes, an older Macbeth, builds sympathy for a killer with soulful weariness

A cinematic presentation of a London production of "Macbeth" starring Ralph Fiennes and Indira Varma has a limited engagement in movie theaters.


Inside the secret poker games opening doors in L.A.'s art scene

Poker-playing artists have let the cigar smoke out and opened up the tables to a more diverse, inclusive and female-friendly pool of players.


Alex Hassilev, last original member of the '60s folk trio the Limeliters, dies at 91

With Glenn Yarbrough and Lou Gottlieb, Alex Hassilev was in one of the most popular bands of the early '60s. 'Through Children's Eyes' made the Limeliters beloved.


Tony nominations reflect a Broadway year in which long shots eclipsed safe bets

'Stereophonic,' 'Merrily We Roll Along,' 'Illinoise,' Alicia Keys' 'Hell's Kitchen,' Sarah Paulson, Jessica Lange, Rachel McAdams, Jeremy Strong: This year even known quantities had to stretch.


2024 Tony Awards: 'Stereophonic' and 'Hell's Kitchen' lead nominations

The nominees for Broadway's biggest prize were announced Tuesday, with "Stereophonic" and "Hell's Kitchen" receiving 13 nods each. Here's the full list of 2024 Tony nominations.


Need a little hope? Geffen Playhouse magic show proves hope is more than an illusion

Helder GuimarAPSes and Frank Marshall created the rare COVID-era theater hit with "The Present." They're back with "The Hope Theory," a magic show about the immigrant experience.


Mark Taper Forum to reopen with 'American Idiot,' Larissa FastHorse's 'Fake It Until You Make It'

Robert O'Hara's new "Hamlet," as well as the Broadway tours of "Life of Pi" and "Parade," are among Center Theatre Group's 2024-25 season offerings.


Review: 'Illinoise,' based on Sufjan Stevens' concept album, clears a fresh Broadway path

Choreographer and director Justin Peck brings an athletic grace to a new, category-defying Broadway musical spun from a Sufjan Stevens album. The singing? It's gorgeous


A new play about Jesus comes to the O.C. It could provoke 'intense' reactions

World premiere 'Galilee, 34,' at South Coast Repertory through May 12, turns biblical figures into flawed humans a in a way that some believers may take issue with.


Chris Pratt, Katherine Schwarzenegger could've given Craig Ellwood teardown 'some honor,' architect's daughter says

Architect Craig Ellwood's daughter told The Times, 'I don't feel bitter' toward Chris Pratt and Katherine Schwarzenegger for tearing down her father's famed Zimmerman House.


Inside LACMA's plans to share its collection with a new Las Vegas museum: 'I'm a West Coast booster'

Early this year the Los Angeles County Museum of Art announced a partnership with the planned Las Vegas Museum of Art. LACMA's Michael Govan and LVMA director Heather Harmon discuss the details of the arrangement.


Commentary: LACMA finally is getting its satellite space. Regrettably, it's in another state

LACMA's collection will be loaned to a new Las Vegas art museum. The deal isn't a jackpot for L.A., which has long been promised its own satellites.


David Mamet slams Hollywood's 'garbage' DEI initiatives. 'It's fascist totalitarianism'

At the L.A. Times Festival of Books, playwright and filmmaker David Mamet blames age, not his conservative politics or inflammatory statements, for his fall from grace.


Review: 'Cabaret' with a kinetic Eddie Redmayne can't redeem a faltering Broadway revival

The Olivier Award-winning revival of "Cabaret," starring a physically precise and theatrically audacious Eddie Redmayne, comes to Broadway but misses his London co-star, Jesse Buckley.


L.A. Times Book Prize winners named in a ceremony filled with support for USC valedictorian Asna Tabassum

Winners at the 2024 L.A. Times Book Prizes included Ed Park for fiction, Ivy Pochoda for mystery/thriller and the pro-Palestinian commencement speaker whose name has become a rallying cry for free speech.


Opera gets slapped with the 'elitist' label. L.A. proves just how wrong that is

With Verdi's 'La Traviata' and Huang Ruo's 'Book of Mountains and Seas' as well as other projects, L.A. Opera is attempting to cover all operatic bases. Can opera thrive here?


Camille Claudel's hand, not her trauma, is at the center of a magnificent Getty Museum show

Sculptor Camille Claudel was more than a tragic figure. Her art influenced her titanic mentor, Auguste Rodin. A smart L.A. exhibition explains how


Broadway makes way for 'Crazy Rich Asians' with new musical directed by Jon M. Chu

Filmmaker Jon M. Chu will find familiar material in his Broadway debut as he directs a musical adaptation of author Kevin Kwan's 'Crazy Rich Asians' trilogy.


Review: 'Monsters of the American Cinema' confronts the horror in grief

Christian St. Croix's 'Monsters of the American Cinema' has its Los Angeles premiere at the Matrix Theatre in a Rogue Machine production directed by John Perrin Flynn.


Why the search for the next Gustavo Dudamel is full of hope a and hazards

Klaus Makela, appointed music director of the Chicago Symphony at the age of 28, has been likened to Gustavo Dudamel. Why orchestras' chasing of youth could have downsides.


Copper thieves strike again, mutilating a 100-year-old monument in MacArthur Park

The newsboy who was part of the Harrison Gray Otis monument gone except for two bronze shoes, one intact and the other mangled.


Review: An August Wilson master class in acting at Pasadena's A Noise Within

Gregg T. Daniel directs a muscular revival of 'King Hedley II," a difficult play done well. Veralyn Jones' performance is extraordinary.


The L.A. island that was home to seven decades of 'lost communities'

Terminal Island may be best known for the Japanese American village tragically uprooted by government order. A new book mines its history as that a but also as resort, artists colony and more.


Review: 'Fat Ham' at the Geffen Playhouse slathers barbecue sauce on 'Hamlet' for delicious comedy

The Broadway production of 'Fat Ham,' James Ijames' Pulitzer Prize-winning riff on 'Hamlet,' has its West Coast premiere at the Geffen Playhouse in L.A. It's gripping, outrageous fun.


Review: Ed Ruscha show wowed in New York. Why it's even better in L.A.

The LACMA show 'Ed Ruscha / Now Then' is the first comprehensive retrospective in more than 20 years of a quintessential American artist.


A new SoCal show hopes to tap the surprisingly big business of two-actor musicals

'Ride,' at San Diego's Old Globe through April 28, is part of a wave of small-cast musicals whose lower costs can spell high rewards for cash-strapped theater companies.


Review: A dazzling Katerina McCrimmon makes for an authentic Fanny Brice in 'Funny Girl'

The Broadway touring production of Michael Mayer's 2022 revival of "Funny Girl" arrives at the Ahmanson Theatre with a star-making lead performance from Katerina McCrimmon.


There's no escaping Philip Glass and his piano etudes right now

Love him or hate him, Philip Glass is inescapable. His 20 piano etudes have become essential listening, his impact on three generations of artists indelible.


Sage Against the Machine is how L.A.'s native plant nerds release their rage

Sage Against the Machine is an L.A.-based band of punk-rock native plant nerds who might do for native plants what the Beach Boys did for surfing.


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