Postscript
Christopher Durang’s Stage Directions for Life
The Tony-winning playwright’s dark, antic satires were many people’s gateway to theatre. I was one of those people.
By Michael Schulman
Remembering William Whitworth’s Editorial Eye
An editor who could see around corners and deep into thorny manuscripts.
By Ian Frazier
Iris Apfel Wore Fame Well
Apfel pursued the driving creative project of her life—getting dressed, dazzlingly—for eight decades without any promise of greater glory. How could she ever have seen it coming?
By Rachel Syme
The Death of Alexei Navalny, Putin’s Most Formidable Opponent
The opposition leader, who died in prison, had been persecuted for years by the Russian state. He remained defiant, and consistently funny, to the very end.
By Masha Gessen
Lev Rubinstein, a Devoted and Defiant Lover of Language
The Russian poet and essayist was a founding member of the Moscow conceptualist movement, an “implausibly social” presence in Moscow, and a firm believer to the end in the possibility of living in Russia with dignity and decency.
By Masha Gessen
Working with Joan Acocella
A former New Yorker fact checker recalls a serious saint who prized fun.
By Neima Jahromi
Thank Goodness for Joan Acocella
The critic, an enemy of pretension, addressed a dazzling array of subjects with intelligence and a one-of-a-kind wit.
By Alexandra Schwartz
The Many Lives of Vinie Burrows
Remembering the activism and artistry of a New York theatre hero.
By Helen Shaw
Ross McDonnell’s Life and Work Were All About Connection
We filmed the Taliban courts together. When my friend and colleague disappeared, I started reëxamining his films and photographs.
By Victor Blue
The Difference That Sandra Day O’Connor Made
The late Supreme Court Justice had a keen feeling for the real-world impact of the Court’s decisions.
By Margaret Talbot