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See How the Met Built ‘Tosca,’ Its Biggest Production of the Season
The Metropolitan Opera's army of artisans has been working for a year to bring 19th-century Rome to life in a new production of Puccini's “Tosca.”
Why Every Pop Star Wants a Piece of Starrah
With hits for Drake, Rihanna and Maroon 5, an intensely private woman is the secret queen of streaming.
MoviePass Adds a Million Subscribers, Even if Theaters Aren’t Sold on It
Users can go to the movies once a day for $9.95 a month. While multiplexes doubt that’s sustainable, the chief executive, who slashed the price, says, “We seem to have hit a nerve in America.”
California Today: California Today: Big Issues Loom on the 2018 Ballot
Thursday: Taxes, Palm Springs pools, another Sacramento retirement and rain.
Europe Edition: Ukraine, St Petersburg, Barack Obama: Your Thursday Briefing
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
Kabul, Roy Moore, Cannabis: Your Thursday Briefing
Here’s what you need to know to start your day.
Travel Tips: How to Make the Most of a Trip to Wine Country
Wine producing regions such as Tuscany and Napa Valley already make for enjoyable vacation destinations, but with a little planning you can get even more from your trip.
South Korea Clamps Down on Bitcoin Trading Amid Market Frenzy
In one of the biggest hubs for virtual currencies, the government said it would no longer let people buy or sell Bitcoin or its rivals anonymously.
In an Era of ‘Forever Wars,’ the Middle East Bureau Manager Who Made Our Coverage Possible
Reporters, photographers and security advisers came and went. Jane Scott-Long stayed.
The Daily: The Vandal and the Mosque: A New Chapter of Forgiveness in Arkansas
The last time I saw Abraham, in the blistering heat of July, everything seemed tenuous. Two weeks before Christmas, things had changed.
New York Today: New York Today: Tony Ruiz, a New Yorker of the Year
Thursday: Honoring a model citizen, preparing for more extreme cold, and goings-on around the city.
Op-Ed Contributor: ‘Game of Thrones,’ Inca Style
President Pablo Kuczynski has saved his job but inflicted great damage on democracy in Peru and in Latin America.
Vietnam '67: Chuck Hagel: Serving in Vietnam — With My Brother
They served together, and were wounded together twice.
Nonfiction: Is Nuclear War Inevitable?
Daniel Ellsberg’s “The Doomsday Machine” is a passionate call for reducing the risk of total destruction.
Behind the Scenes of ‘Tosca,’ the Messiest Production in Met History
A lavish new staging of Puccini’s “Tosca,” envisioned as an act of redemption, loses three singers and two conductors. But the show must go on.
Nonfiction: The Oil and Gas Sector Is Changing — and So Is Geopolitics
In “Windfall,” Meghan O’Sullivan offers a tour of the world and how the rise of cheap gas and fracking are causing shifts in power.
By the Book: James Rollins: By the Book
At the beginning of his career, James Rollins, author of ‘The Demon Crown,’ stole Samuel Clemens’s pen name.
Behind the Scenes at the Natural History Museum
Look around the museum’s frozen tissue lab, paleontology collection, object conservation lab and more on this virtual reality tour of the American Museum of Natural History.
Why Self-Compassion Beats Self-Confidence
Confidence may be overrated.
Editorial: E.U. Reminds Poland How a Democracy Acts
By moving to control the judiciary, the Polish governing party earned a rebuke and the threat of losing voting rights in the union.