Back Talk: John Turturro
Christine Smallwood
Actor John Turturro discusses his latest project, a production of Beckett's Endgame at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.


Christine Smallwood
Actor John Turturro discusses his latest project, a production of Beckett's Endgame at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.
J. Gabriel Boylan : The Short of It
When will we stop living in the '60s?
The most devastated neighborhood in America makes an ideal backdrop for a morally ambiguous play about abandonment.
Elizabeth Drew : Cultural Criticism & Analysis
Peter Morgan's new play is highly entertaining; Frank Langella's portrait of Nixon is brutally amusing; yet the play is historically inaccurate.
A Cuban children's troupe has performed around the globe but finds it almost impossible to enter the United States.
Tom Stoppard's epic Coast of Utopia speaks as much to the state of the American left as it does to the roots of Russia's revolution.
Margaret Spillane : Books, Literature, & Ideas
No playwright has given plainer witness to the planet's most violent century or borne such loving witness to the dispossessed.
Performance artist Karen Finley answers questions about politics, satire and her new book, a fantasy affair between George W. Bush and Martha Stewart.
My Name Is Rachel Corrie was a big hit in London, but the New York Theatre Workshop backed off from producing the play. Why is it so hard for Americans to have a healthy debate about Palestinian human rights?
Two new books on Shakespeare examine his shadowy life, his times and the origins of his imagination. A third explores whether the Bard of Avon was, in fact, Edward de Vere.
Harold Pinter : US Foreign Policy
In his lecture to the Swedish Academy December 7, Nobel Prize-winning playwright Harold Pinter excoriated the United States for hubris and manipulations of the truth over decades of abusive foreign policy, in particular the Bush Administration's war in Iraq. Here is the full text of his lecture.
Admired from a distance and reviled up close, Laurence Olivier could establish a relation with his audience that was like an infection. His official biography chronicles a personal life of an actor who altered the cultural compass of a nation.
Can a vibrant and cosmopolitan artistic scene help heal the wounds of Afghanistan's traumatic past?
Katha Pollitt : Feminism & Women
If feminists don't talk about sex in a fun, accessible, inspiring, nonpuritanical way, who will?


Get the best of The Nation on your Blackberry or Smartphone: mobile.thenation.com

McCain Had Better Hope Voters Think He's a Liar | It won't hurt the GOP contender if Americans are reminded that he and Bush were never close.
John Nichols
Cluster Bombs Kill Kids | The US is working to undermine an international cluster bomb treaty.
Peter Rothberg
America 2.3 (Million) | Modern America through the lens of one number.
Zephyr Teachout
One in Four Republicans Reject McCain | In Indiana & North Carolina, GOP candidate had a bigger problem with his base than Obama did with wavering Dems.
John Nichols
Newt Gingrich to GOP--Wake Up or Perish | The architect of the Contract ON America warns his party of looming disaster.
Katrina vanden Heuvel
Who Really Lost the Cold War? | Is the US finished as a superpower just as Russia rides a wave of energy back to great power status?
Tom Engelhardt
Obama's Party | Is Obama remaking the Democratic Party?
Christopher Hayes
Preachers and Politics | Secularism looks better and better.
Katha Pollitt
