ALMANAC: Feb 9 "Sunday Morning" looks back at historical events on this date.
The beloved weekly magazine encompassing journalism, fiction, poetry and cartoons, is celebrating its centenary. New Yorker ...
Kathryn Street's vintage and collectibles shop is a place she simply hopes sparks joy. A stroll through the store at 121-B South Gloster St. – next to Triangle Appliance at Crosstown – reveals finds ...
Train-set murder mystery Loco Motive took me on a railway journey back to my beloved LucasArts adventure game favorites ...
A reporter in 1994 explored what technological advancements were new in TV. Even though the typical television of the time ...
In this age of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and CW shows such as Arrow and The Flash, fans can get their superhero fix in ...
One of children's TV icons had his fingers doctored for the Japanese market for a chilling and surprising reason. In Japan ...
Feiffer, who died Jan. 17, first published his self-titled comic strip in The Village Voice in 1956. Later syndicated, Feiffer went on to run for more than four decades. Originally broadcast in 1982.
he felt he couldn’t address “in six panels of a cartoon.” His first play, 1967’s “Little Murders,” went on to win an Obie Award, a leading honor for Off-Broadway and Off-Off-Broadway productions. He ...
Feiffer was best known for illustrating the children's classic "The Phantom Tollbooth." His loopy lines left a lasting mark on art, literature and film.
Artistically limber, Feiffer hopscotched among numerous forms of expression, chronicling the curiosity of childhood, urban angst and other societal currents. To each he brought a sharp wit and acute ...
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