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'Rent' Takes Final Bow On Broadway

NPR - Sun Sep 7, 4:00 PM ET

The curtain comes down on Rent for the last time Sunday night, after 12 years on Broadway. Although critics call the musical dated, it will live on in a touring production and countless high school drama classes.

  • 'Bangkok Dangerous': A Hit Man Adrift In Thailand NPR - Fri Sep 5, 6:03 PM ET

    The Pang Brothers' partially sanitized remake of their own 1999 thriller is hardly philosophical. Its style and its soul are more Asian than American — and it leaves some space for contemplation between shootouts.

  • 'The Fly' Stirs New Buzz — On The Operatic Stage NPR - Fri Sep 5, 5:36 PM ET

    Science fiction isn't typical source material for opera. Which is why Placido Domingo was a little surprised when The Fly landed on his desk. But David Cronenberg and Howard Shore's opera opens Sept. 7 in Los Angeles.

  • Summary Judgment: A Record Summer For Movies NPR - Fri Sep 5, 1:00 PM ET

    Despite economic woes, domestic ticket sales topped a record $4 billion this summer. Slate.com's Mark Jordan Legan caught up with a few movie-goers to see what they enjoyed about their cinematic experience. Food prices weren't part of it.

  • 'Peanuts' Animator Bill Melendez Dies NPR - Fri Sep 5, 12:41 PM ET

    Bill Melendez, the animator who gave life to Snoopy, Charlie Brown and other Peanuts characters on the small and big screens died Tuesday. He was 91. Melendez animated TV specials such as A Charlie Brown Christmas and was the voice of Snoopy.

  • 'True Blood,' Tasty New TV From Alan Ball And HBO NPR - Fri Sep 5, 11:42 AM ET

    The new HBO series centers on a vampire clan living in a small Louisiana town. It's by Alan Ball, creator of the hit series Six Feet Under, and based on a series of novels by Charlaine Harris. Anna Paquin stars.

  • The Man Behind 'The Shield' NPR - Fri Sep 5, 11:40 AM ET

    Shawn Ryan, creator and executive producer of the acclaimed FX drama, The Shield, discusses his involvement in the series.

  • Michael Chiklis Shines On 'The Shield' NPR - Fri Sep 5, 11:25 AM ET

    Michael Chiklis stars as rogue detective Vic Mackey in the TV series The Shield; the Peabody Award-winning show is in its seventh season on the FX cable channel.

  • CCH Pounder, The Woman In Charge On 'The Shield' NPR - Fri Sep 5, 11:25 AM ET

    Best known for her portrayal of Detective Claudette Wyms on The Shield, the actress also boasts film credits ranging from Bagdad Cafe to Benny & Joon.

  • Alan Ball Re-Emerges With Vampires, 'Towelhead' NPR - Fri Sep 5, 8:58 AM ET

    It's a big week for the creator of the death-obsessed series Six Feet Under. After several years out of the spotlight, his two major projects are emerging within a few days of each other. He discusses why both are focused on sex.

  • Voiceover Mix-Up: Who's Who In Movie Trailers NPR - Fri Sep 5, 8:36 AM ET

    In a remembrance of movie trailer announcer Don LaFontaine on Wednesday, his voice was misidentified. Today, we set the record straight and add a little confusion to the mix.

  • In 'Spore,' Players Create Civilizations From Cells NPR - Thu Sep 4, 10:18 AM ET

    The creator of The Sims has a new game out. In Spore, players create their own worlds — starting from creatures the size of a cell, and evolving until an entire civilization springs up.

  • Russian Literary Boom Linked To Authoritarianism NPR - Wed Sep 3, 4:15 PM ET

    Literary critics feared that after the Soviet collapse, the easy availability of popular romance novels and thrillers would seduce Russian readers away from deeper works. Now they attribute a literary revival to the country's new authoritarianism.

  • King Of Voiceovers Don LaFontaine Dies NPR - Wed Sep 3, 11:49 AM ET

    Voiceover artist Don LaFontaine died this week at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles from complications of an ongoing illness. He was 68. LaFontaine was the voice behind thousands of movie trailers. In 2006, he parodied himself in a Geico commercial.

  • Poking Fun At The 'Stuff White People Like' NPR - Tue Sep 2, 9:12 PM ET

    In a new book based on his popular blog, Christian Lander tracks the trends and tendencies of white people, from fair-trade organic coffee to vintage T-shirts.

  • The 'Bechdel Rule,' Defining Pop-Culture Character NPR - Tue Sep 2, 3:21 PM ET

    Two decades ago, cartoonist Alison Bechdel spelled out a test for whether a movie was worth her time. "Yes" if: it (a) featured at least two women who (b) talk to each other about (c) something other than a man. Two decades later, what measures up?

  • What 'The Shield' Taught Basic Cable NPR - Tue Sep 2, 1:00 PM ET

    It's time to bid farewell to one of TV's most under-appreciated series. When this gritty FX cop drama began in 2002, it was groundbreaking in more ways than one.

  • Last Act For 'The Shield' NPR - Tue Sep 2, 11:55 AM ET

    TV critic David Bianculli considers the impact of the FX drama series The Shield, which begins its seventh and final season.

  • Brenda, Kelly Return In Updated '90210' NPR - Tue Sep 2, 10:33 AM ET

    The lights at the Peach Pit went out at the turn of the century when Beverly Hills 90210 went off the air. But the television show that was a pop culture sensation in the 1990s is back, in what's being marketed as an edgy, updated show. The prime time teen soap premieres Tuesday.

  • A French Marionette Tradition NPR - Mon Sep 1, 4:00 PM ET

    A French summertime tradition for young children is a visit to a marionette theatre to watch the antics of a character named Guignol. Guignol always manages to outwit the thief with the help of children in the audience.

  • An Oscar Crop With An Instinct For Change NPR - Mon Sep 1, 12:06 AM ET

    Forty years ago, the best picture nominees signaled a stirring in Hollywood — an appetite for revolutionary realism, socially conscious stories and movies targeted at the long-ignored youth audience.

  • Jackson 5 To Reunite At Awards Ceremony NPR - Sun Aug 31, 1:32 PM ET

    Sunday night, one of the biggest phenomena in pop music reunites for the eighth BMI Urban Awards. Four of the five original members of the Jackson 5 (Jackie, Tito, Marlon and Jermaine Jackson) are all scheduled to appear at the Wilshire Theatre. Michael Jackson has not yet confirmed an appearance.

  • Lincoln's Home Away From The White House NPR - Sun Aug 31, 12:01 AM ET

    For nearly a quarter of his presidency, Abraham Lincoln lived not in the White House, but rather three miles away — in a large, airy summer home in Northwest Washington, D.C.

  • Fort Ticonderoga In Trouble NPR - Fri Aug 29, 4:54 PM ET

    Fort Ticonderoga, in upstate New York, saw bloody action in the French and Indian Wars and the Revolutionary Wars But now the privately owned museum and battleground is fighting for its own existence. The fort could be forced to shut down or sell off key artifacts.

  • 'Year Of The Fish': A Cinderella Story, In Chinatown NPR - Fri Aug 29, 1:15 PM ET

    A pretty, plucky heroine, a wicked massage-parlor proprietress, and a handsome-prince figure more perceptive than most — this modern fairy tale stays breezy, brisk and down to Earth.

  • Summary Judgment: Yet Another 'College' Movie? NPR - Fri Aug 29, 1:00 PM ET

    Do we really need another SuperBad-esque comedy? Slate.com's Mark Jordan Legan tells us what the critics are saying about College as well as the latest sci-fi flick, Babylon AD starring Vin Diesel and Traitor starring Don Cheadle.

  • 'Trouble The Water' Captures Katrina On Camcorder NPR - Fri Aug 29, 11:05 AM ET

    As New Orleans' levees buckled, Kimberly Rivers Roberts turned her video camera on marooned friends, relatives and neighbors. Roberts' footage has been adapted into a powerful documentary that is as much about America as it is about the deadly storm.

  • Artist Gives Old Saints New Faces NPR - Fri Aug 29, 8:12 AM ET

    There are exactly 103 roads named after Catholic saints in Los Angeles. J. Michael Walker has spent eight years exploring these roads and avenues, researching their namesake saints and finding connections with the people who inhabit them.

  • 'Boss' Fans Share Tips On Rockin' A Political Party NPR - Thu Aug 28, 12:01 AM ET

    Barack Obama will accept the Democratic presidential nomination in an outdoor stadium with 70,000 screaming onlookers, a light show and music. It'll look like a rock concert rather than a political rally. Bruce Springsteen concertgoers give advice on how to keep your cool and not look like an Obama poseur.

  • Xbox's 'Braid' A Surprise Hit, For Surprising Reasons NPR - Wed Aug 27, 4:40 PM ET

    It's no shoot-'em-up, and not quite a blockbuster. But at nearly 100,000 downloads and counting, the moody "meaning-of-life" time-tripper feels like a game that a grown-up can play — and maybe should.

  • Don Cheadle's Spy Turn NPR - Wed Aug 27, 11:15 AM ET

    In his latest movie, Traitor, Don Cheadle plays a CIA operative who goes undercover to work with a terrorist group — but then becomes a suspected terrorist himself.

  • Minorities Get Little Respect On The Big Screen NPR - Wed Aug 27, 12:01 AM ET

    As the summer movie season draws to a close, Morning Edition commentator John Ridley weighs in on what he thinks has been a really bad spell for minorities at the multiplex — both for actors and moviegoers.

  • In Central Park, 'Hair' Line Brings A City Closer NPR - Tue Aug 26, 3:17 PM ET

    Free summer staging of the '60s musical has New Yorkers camping out overnight — but a sense of shared adventure (and bike messengers bearing delivery breakfasts) help pass the time.

  • 2 Minute Film Noir: Stool Pigeon Street NPR - Tue Aug 26, 1:00 PM ET

    Security concerns have led to a lot of surveillance equipment around Stool Pigeon Street. A fictional fellow discovers that wherever he goes, he's being watched. By who, it almost doesn't matter any more.

  • Andrew Fleming And Pam Brady: Making 'Hamlet 2' NPR - Tue Aug 26, 11:07 AM ET

    The two collaborated on the new Steve Coogan comedy, about a failed actor and overzealous drama teacher who mounts a musical sequel to Shakespeare's most famous tragedy.

  • Summary Judgment: 'Death Race,' 'House Bunny,' 'Hamlet' NPR - Fri Aug 22, 1:27 PM ET

    Slate's Mark Jordan Legan reviews film reviews for Death Race, House Bunny, and Hamlet 2.

  • Is America Obsessed With Beauty? NPR - Fri Aug 22, 1:00 PM ET

    Director Darryl Roberts explores whether Americans care too much about looks in his new movie America the Beautiful. He follows models and interviews media editors to get answers.

  • Barbershop Takes On Veep Stakes, Master P NPR - Fri Aug 22, 12:00 PM ET

    The guys in this week's Barbershop — Jimi Izrael, Ruben Navarrette, Arsalan Iftikhar and Nick Charles — comb through the week's headlines. They talk about the latest buzz surrounding the presidential veep stakes, the USA's performance in the Olympics and rapper Master P's latest business venture, family friendly TV.

  • Manny Farber, A Critical Eye For Termite Art NPR - Fri Aug 22, 11:20 AM ET

    Critic at large John Powers remembers film critic and artist Manny Farber, who died Aug. 18 at the age of 91.

  • Jukebox The Ghost: Promise Of A 'Good Day' NPR - Fri Aug 22, 11:16 AM ET

    Often compared to the likes of Ben Folds, or even a muted incarnation of Queen, Jukebox the Ghost makes music that's buoyant without leaving a saccharine aftertaste. Exhibit A: the flamboyantly orchestrated "Good Day."

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