Arts Audio/Video - NPR

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  • The Most Exciting New Art Medium: Paper

    at NPR – Fri Dec 4, 11:46 am ET  

    The most exciting new art medium has actually been around for centuries: origami. In recent years, the paper-folding community has become obsessed with advancing the art and refining the math. A new documentary examines this cross section of science and art. Full Story »

  • Nervous And Nerdy, From 'Office' To Silver Screen

    at NPR – Fri Dec 4, 10:04 am ET  

    Comedian Ed Helms came to attention of the comedy world as a correspondent on The Daily Show. Helms is now a regular on NBC's The Office and starred in the recent film The Hangover, which is now out of DVD. Full Story »

  • When Music Makes The Movie

    at NPR – Fri Dec 4, 5:00 am ET  

    When you hear the perfect song play at the perfect moment during Mad Men, Twilight or Grey's Anatomy, you probably have Alexandra Patsavas to thank. As a Hollywood music supervisor, she works to find the "right musical point of view" for films and TV shows. Patsavas talks to Steve Inskeep about some of her favorite movies to watch at home. Full Story »

  • You Can't Put A Bow On An E-Book

    at NPR – Fri Dec 4, 5:00 am ET  

    Bookstore owners are hoping the 2009 holiday season will be a little merrier and brighter than it was in 2008. So far, so good — booksellers say highly hyped books from big name authors are bringing more customers into stores. But online purchasing and e-books are still stealing away many potential customers. Full Story »

  • A World Of Novels: Picks For Best Foreign Fiction

    at NPR – Fri Dec 4, 4:15 am ET  

    2009's top works of foreign fiction, as picked by critic Jessa Crispin, feature a geography as wide ranging as their topics: genetic research, civil unrest, sibling resentment, and fairy-tale depictions of government corruption. Full Story »

  • 'Brothers': Family Ties, Unraveling In Wartime

    at NPR – Thu Dec 3, 7:00 pm ET  

    Tobey Maguire and Jake Gyllenhaal are Sam and Tommy Cahill, one an upright Army captain on his way back to Afghanistan, the other a delinquent, newly paroled after a three-year sentence for robbery. But the real center of Jim Sheridan's movie isn't the brothers, but their whole teetering clan, which will collapse and rebuild itself in complicated new ways. Full Story »

  • A Lawyer And A Cad, Ill-Met By 'Moonlight'

    at NPR – Thu Dec 3, 6:00 pm ET  

    When her husband (Timothy Hutton) spoils a romantic weekend by announcing that he's leaving her for a younger woman, a New York lawyer (Meg Ryan) decides to hold the cad hostage. Then the burglars arrive. Critic Jeannette Catsoulis says this misshapen hybrid of romantic comedy and home-invasion nightmare is a tone-deaf exploration of marital dysfunction, unbearable to watch and excruciating to listen to. Full Story »

  • Man Enough To Love 'Eat, Pray, Love'

    at NPR – Thu Dec 3, 2:49 pm ET  

    So what if it's pure literary estrogen? Author David Sax says Elizabeth Gilbert's Eat Pray Love the best comeback story he's ever read. Sure, Gilbert's memoir is often dismissed as a beach read for unhappy housewives, but Sax says the haters are missing the point. Full Story »

  • Desiree Rogers: Social Secretary Or Socialite?

    at NPR – Thu Dec 3, 12:01 pm ET  

    Before Desiree Rogers was Social Secretary and Special Assistant to the President, she was a Queen. Twice. Full Story »

  • Judy Davis, Inspiring 'Brilliant Career's 30 Years Later

    at NPR – Thu Dec 3, 11:40 am ET  

    The Oscar-nominated 1979 film My Brilliant Career stars Judy Davis, as a young woman growing up in rural Australia at the end of the 19th century. Film critic John Powers gives Davis credit for creating the template for the Australian screen actress: bravery, incandescence, and occasional cussedness. Full Story »

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