Arts & Entertainment Features

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  • "The Rainmaker"

    Woody Harrelson brings his trademark touch of self-parody to the Broadway stage.
  • The extras

    One bad Hollywood experience is just one too many.
  • Sacré bleu!

    Why are Catholics so set on dogging "Dogma"?
  • Stayin' alive -- barely

    Broadway reduces the complex, ambivalent "Saturday Night Fever" movie to campy clothes and blockbuster dance numbers.
  • The trouble with "Trek"

    Plagued by falling ratings, rampant merchandising and a boss who hates the franchise legacy, the noble "Star Trek" faces the indignities of age.
  • Art history 101

    Legendary arts educator Philip Yenawine talks about the effrontery of art collectors, irresponsible artists and the willful ignorance of the average American male.
  • Garageland

    The Clash devolved from punk snots to self-destructive louts. A new live set captures the band in its ragged glory.
  • Vox populi

    An interview with "Sound Portraits'" mike-shy producer, David Isay.
  • And now for something completely familiar

    "Monty Python's Flying Circus": Still the best TV sketch show there's ever been.
  • Call me Laurie

    Multimedia performance artist Laurie Anderson on Melville's Bible, the American art of the jump cut and why "Moby-Dick" still matters.
  • True "Sensation"

    The only offensive dung in New York's controversial art exhibit is the mayor's bullshit.
  • The 1999 MTV Video Music Awards

    What, you expected obscenities, naked butts and rock 'n' roll attitude? You should have been in the press tent.
  • Millennial Brigadoon

    The annual Burning Man festival in the Nevada desert invents a hyper-real space, a republic of drugs, nudity and spectacle.
  • With a song in their hearts

    Singers have always made instinctive actors. This fall, a pack of new movies offers further evidence.
  • Phishers of men

    Young Jews by the thousands follow the Phish tour, looking for God in a haze of mushrooms and acid. A rock 'n' roll rabbi wants to lead them out of mammon into the land of milk and honey.
  • Critics: Who needs 'em?

    In a culture increasingly driven by hype, you do.
  • Theater in black and white

    Two Chicago plays -- "Jitney" and "Spinning into Butter" -- tackle racial issues from opposite sides of the tracks.
  • The new house blend

    Terence Riley, curator of the new MOMA exhibit "The Un-Private House," talks about Martha Stewart, changing domestic ideals and why walking around your house naked is increasingly a public issue.
  • Philosophy of the bedroom

    Mary Gaitskill, Greil Marcus, David Gates, Lisa Zeidner and A.M. Homes weigh in on "Eyes Wide Shut."
  • "Monsters of Grace"

    Philip Glass and Robert Wilson attempted to explore the intersection of the performing arts and digital culture. But a funny thing happened on the way to the theater.
  • Hacking toward Bethlehem

    Abe Ingersoll, a former punk hacker and infamous "Road Rules" cast member, reflects on his ill-fated 15 minutes.
  • FilmAid

    When some Hollywood producers tried to bring the cinema -- and a few celebrities -- to an Albanian refugee camp, they found their audience, though appreciative, had more pressing dramas to deal with.
  • Keeping it (kind of) real

    Lots of action -- and a little angst -- at ESPN's biggest X Games event ever.
  • I am everyday evil

    Director Neil LaBute's "Bash" explores the dark secrets of ordinary people.
  • Standup for your blights

    George Carlin talks about Littleton jokes, white-yuppie cocksuckers and why he still loves his BMW.
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