Cardi B and Candace Owens have threatened to sue each other over social-media comments made in wake of Sunday’s ‘WAP’ performance on the Grammys.
“The Bachelor’s” controversial season came to an end with a fraught discussion on Monday — and no news about the status of besieged host Chris Harrison.
‘The Talk’ will continue its production break through March 23, CBS said, to allow more time for an investigation of events and allegations on the show.
‘It wasn’t a complete surprise,’ Michelle Obama said on NBC’s ‘Today’ of Meghan’s troubling stories about racism within the royal family.
One year of COVID-19
When the pandemic hit the U.S., any remaining distinction between ‘in real life’ and life online collapsed. IRL may never be the same.
Eleven classical musicians from both coasts share their stories of struggle, survival and hope during a year that presented extraordinary challenges — and unexpected opportunities — for the art form.
We’ve also spoken to theater professionals, moviemakers, musicians and novelists about how the past year has changed their industries.
COVID-19 restrictions are loosening for cultural institutions even though health experts urge caution. We’ve haven’t yet won the fight.
After months of COVID-19 closures, Los Angeles County unlocked a significant portion of its battered business sector Monday, allowing in-restaurant dining, gym workouts, movie-going and a host of other activities at indoor venues.
Los Angeles County of Museum of Art will reopen its galleries April 1. As of now, it’s set to be the first major L.A. museum to welcome back guests.
Indoor theater will remain closed even as counties move from red to orange to yellow tier, and the state spells out capacity limits for outdoor stages.
Yes, Broadway shut down. But so did national tours. In one pandemic year, this California actress lost out on the possibilities of both.
We asked readers working in healthcare to send us art they’ve made in the pandemic. See their paintings, hyper-real dollhouse furniture, toast art, cookie decorating and more.
A year ago Michael Michetti, one of L.A. theater’s most accomplished directors, was about to open the Stephen Sondheim musical “Passion” at Boston Court Pasadena. Then the pandemic hit.
Pianist Sharon Su found it hard to keep up her musical practice without the promise of live performances. She realized she wasn’t alone.
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Judy Chicago gave up on finding a new spot for her Desert X smoke sculpture. Now she’s worried the brouhaha will affect work planned in San Francisco.
The Desert X art biennial returns to the Coachella Valley, smaller and less compelling than before. Here are the standouts to see.
Anne Lacaton and Jean-Philippe Vassal take architecture’s top honor for work that includes the Palais de Tokyo rehab and social housing preservation
The Watts Towers, Urban Light, the Corporate Head, Four Arches, and yes, the wacky and never-quite-working Triforium offer outdoor public art.
Los Angeles Philharmonic wins the Grammy for orchestral performance, and the UCLA Chamber Singers are part of the winning team for choral performance.
The digital play ‘UnRavelled,’ free to view through March 30, explores the mysteries of creativity through the composer and a ‘Bolero'-obsessed artist.
In a solo show at the Wadsworth Atheneum he takes his work to new scales. Plus, the pandemic and the state of culture one year out — in our weekly arts newsletter.
Your arts watch list: An operatic “Breaking the Waves,” Nowruz comedy night, Invertigo Dance Theatre, bluesman Taj Mahal and a celebration of Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town.”
He stopped eating and lost 25 pounds in the stress of the pandemic, but Alexander Blake says he’s also seen important positive change. He’s one of 11 musicians from both coasts sharing their stories of struggle, survival and hope.