If you wish to understand the enduring legacy of Mariah Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas Is You” – the song which, 30 years ...
Jessie Buckley, Paul Mescal, Chloé Zhao and more of the artists behind 'Hamnet' detail the making of the climactic sequence inside the Globe Theatre.
Pop star SZA joined Sabrina Carpenter and Olivia Rodrigo in condemning the Trump administration for incorporating their music ...
It seems overly simplistic, saccharine even, to describe Agnes Martin’s paintings as pure, but I just can’t find a way around it. Using only simple lines and grids, often in gray or very muted colors, ...
Agnes tells the incredible story of a natural disaster that forever changed a region. On June 19th, 1972, the first hurricane of the season, Agnes, crossed over the Florida Panhandle and headed back ...
Agnes Aineah is a Kenyan journalist with a background in digital and newspaper reporting. She holds a master of arts degree in digital journalism from the Aga Khan University Graduate School of Media ...
REGISTERED NURSES ARE CALLING FOR THE HOSPITAL TO DIVEST FROM INDUSTRIES THEY CLAIM VIOLATE THE CHURCH’S VALUES, AND INSTEAD INVEST IN STAFF AND PATIENTS. CALLS FOR TRANSPARENCY AND FAIRNESS ECHOING ...
Among the several clashes in Wednesday Season 2, Enid and Agnes' was one of the most chaotic ones. On one side, we have Enid Sinclair, Wednesday Addams's roommate and best friend, and on the other, we ...
One of the most endearing (and also creepy) characters in Wednesday Season 2 is, hands down, our very own Agnes DeMille. Nobody can forget the teen's signature look from the start of the season — her ...
Although Wednesday fans are shipping a new pair after Season 2, one star of the Netflix series doesn’t think it would be an appropriate coupling. Emma Myers recently explained why she doesn’t think ...
Wednesday may be the object of Agnes' obsession, but fans of the Netflix drama are beginning to develop an obsession of their own — and it has nothing to do with the titular Addams. Now streaming, the ...
There’s something about Norman Jewison’s 1985 film “Agnes of God,” which just turned 40, that sinks deep into my bones. It brings on a feeling like being stunned. It happens again and again throughout ...