Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

Today's paper. Last Updated: 02/20/2012

02/17/2006

Paid access archive

Melancholy at the Movies

Why is it that Russian film directors - and their audiences - seem to have a taste for tragic endings?

Wanted

Getting your tea in a glassholder allows you to tell whether someone has put his finger in it or spat in it, Vasya explained.

Ushering In the Thaw

An exhibition looks back at Khrushchev's sensational denunciation of Stalinism at the 20th Party Congress.

Dance From the Desert

An innovative contemporary dance troupe from Israel kicks off the annual Grand Ballet festival.

Democracy at Stake

Anna Politkovskaya may be known for her gutsy reporting, but in her book she calls herself just another former Soviet citizen who dreads returning to a totalitarian regime.

Salon

Although Andrey Kurkov's books have been translated into many languages, they are riddled with flaws, from one-dimensional characters to unbelievable plot twists.

In Top Form

Two exhibitions show how Kasimir Malevich continues to fascinate artists almost 100 years after ""Black Square.""

A Tuneful Life

Andrei Petrov, who wrote the music for classic Soviet films such as ""Office Romance,"" dies at age 75.

The Clown Prince

Slapstick humor accentuates the tragedy of ""Hamlet"" in Yury Butusov's unusual staging of the classic play at the Chekhov Moscow Art Theater.

Image

Late last month, the Tretyakov Gallery unveiled a freshly restored, 100-year-old marble statue of Empress Catherine the Great.

Springtime for Brezhnev

In the comic fantasy ""Rabbit Over the Void,"" the bushy-eyebrowed Soviet leader gets unexpectedly caught up in the colorful intrigues of Gypsy life.


Most Read
 

Dear readers!

We are currently in the process of developing our website and would like your feedback to help us make improvements.

Click on this message to take our survey it will take you only three minutes to fill out!

Don't show this message again.