Unbridled Affection
Pia Catton · November 3, 2017 In 1971, when Congress passed the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act, the aim was to protect the animals from “capture, branding, harassment, or death.” The law hailed wild horses as “living symbols of the historic and pioneer spirit of the West.”
A Man in Motion
Pia Catton · August 6, 2017 Of all the unanswerable questions in the universe, there’s one that brings the brightest minds of Broadway and Hollywood to their knees: What makes one musical or movie musical a hit and another a flop? A veritable ocean of cocktails flows over this question. But during the 1940s, the Hollywood…
A Man in Motion
Pia Catton · August 4, 2017 Of all the unanswerable questions in the universe, there’s one that brings the brightest minds of Broadway and Hollywood to their knees: What makes one musical or movie musical a hit and another a flop? A veritable ocean of cocktails flows over this question. But during the 1940s, the Hollywood…
What's Pasta Is Prologue
Pia Catton · January 26, 2017 As if America isn't going through enough already, here's a news flash: Our nation is to blame for propagating the story that Marco Polo introduced pasta to Italy from China. This "persistent" whopper was, in no uncertain terms, "conjured up by the Americans," writes Kantha Shelke. In 1929, an…
Up from Macaroni
Pia Catton · January 20, 2017 As if America isn’t going through enough already, here's a news flash: Our nation is to blame for propagating the story that Marco Polo introduced pasta to Italy from China. This "persistent" whopper was, in no uncertain terms, "conjured up by the Americans," writes Kantha Shelke. In 1929, an…
FASHION FOR REAL WOMEN
Pia Catton · September 9, 2016 Marie-France Pochna
Dance Marathon
Pia Catton · September 5, 2011 New York
Final Impressionist
Pia Catton · July 20, 2009 There are reasons enough to take a swing through the French Riviera, but for the art lover, here's one more. The palm-tree-lined town of Le Cannet, just north of Cannes, has established the first and only museum devoted to the painter Pierre Bonnard. Located in a classic villa, the museum will be…
Model Citizen
Pia Catton · March 30, 2009 The marriage of Gisele Bündchen and Tom Brady may look like an even celebrity match: two beautiful, talented millionaires who will be photographed in good times and bad, till death (or the ill effects of mega-fame) do them part. But in terms of cultural relevance, she is by far the bigger star.
A Tudor Dynasty
Pia Catton · February 9, 2009 When a choreographer's centennial year rolls around, the public can count on a few sure things. There will be at least one celebratory video montage, plus one earnest, yet chummy panel discussion. A few rarely seen ballets will be performed throughout a year that will culminate in a blowout evening…
Does She, or . . . ?
Pia Catton · December 8, 2008 Do Gentlemen Really Prefer Blondes?
When It Sizzles
Pia Catton · November 17, 2008 Paris
Prancing Rudy
Pia Catton · December 3, 2007 Nureyev
Verona Story
Pia Catton · June 11, 2007 Narrative ballets aren't really designed to make you think. They're more about delivering the works--from dazzling pointe work onstage to waterworks pouring from the eyes of sentimental fans. Even when a choreographer transposes a piece of literature to the stage, any grappling with the text tends…
Coming Attractions
Pia Catton · January 2, 2006 I DO NOT APPROVE OF fantasy football as a topic of conversation: With all the real-life sports out there, why noodle over make-believe match-ups? But now, I sort of get it. And it's because of American Ballet Theatre's fall season at New York's City Center. These days, the company is so loaded with…
The Bolshoi's Back
Pia Catton · September 26, 2005 THE BOLSHOI BALLET'S RECENT TWO-week engagement at New York's Metropolitan Opera House was like a marvelous party. There were good stories, feisty politics, funny jokes (albeit, ballet jokes), and lots of dancing. Oh, and there was an orgy--a proper Roman one, with satyrs and red-haired courtesans.…
Dulcinea en Pointe
Pia Catton · July 25, 2005 WHAT A SUMMER OF LOVE this has been. Tom Cruise fell for the nubile actress Katie Holmes, just in time for the premiere of War of the Worlds. Brad Pitt became smitten with his costar Angelina Jolie, conveniently prior to their film Mr. & Mrs. Smith. And in light of such calculated coupling, it's a…
STILL BLOOM-ING
Pia Catton · June 2, 1997 CULTURAL CRITICS PRONOUNCE, almost daily, that America is going to hell in a handbasket. But no one has done so as memorably, or as successfully, as Allan Bloom did in 1987 with The Closing of the American Mind. Bloom told America that her professors and parents had been so corrupted that the young…
FRUITLESS FEMINISTS
Pia Catton · December 9, 1996 STIRRED BY THE DISCOVERY of soccer moms, feminists are now on the lookout for minivan madonnas. "Family feminism," a new twist in America's most malleable social movement, seeks to enlist women who want to listen to their maternal urges rather than ignore them. Yes, with a PTA card in one hand and…
JUDY CHICAGOLAND
Pia Catton · October 14, 1996 Judy Chicago has written her second autobiography, Beyond the Flower (Viking, 282 pages, $ 27.95). If you missed the first, don't worry; Beyond the Flower has everything you could possibly want to know about her. Chicago (nee Cohen) is best known for The Dinner Party, an "installation" that made…