It’s our last chance to bask in the company of the bighearted Midwesterners from “Somebody Somewhere,” starring Bridget Everett.
Here’s more on that show and other entertainment highlights this weekend →
Sandy Morris/HBO
Television
“To us, these are real people. They go on past this season. I see them just living their lives after the credits roll,” Hannah Bos, a showrunner for the Peabody-winning dramedy “Somebody Somewhere,” says of its characters. The first episode of the final season airs on HBO on Sunday at 10:30 p.m. Eastern time.
Film
The papal potboiler “Conclave” is stuffed “with a Daumier-esque collection of smooth and bearded, guarded and open faces” and features “a juicy main cast” of Ralph Fiennes, Isabella Rossellini, Stanley Tucci, John Lithgow, Lucian Msamati and “a wonderful Sergio Castellitto,” Manohla Dargis writes. It is out today.
Theater
Starring Rachel Zegler and Kit Connor, the director Sam Gold’s youth-forward revival of “Romeo + Juliet” might be “less terrifying than teenifying” and “a little slick,” but there’s not much unlikable about it, Jesse Green writes. The play is at Circle in the Square Theater.
Sara Krulwich/The New York Times
Art & Museums
José Guadalupe Posada, whose skeleton illustrations are often replicated for modern Day of the Dead celebrations, died in obscurity, but he is remembered in “Mexican Prints at the Vanguard” with a wall of his work that gives the show “real impact,” Will Heinrich writes. It is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art through Jan. 5.
via The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Pop & Rock
Tonight and tomorrow night, André 3000 will perform songs from his flute-centric solo album, “New Blue Sun,” amid the “majestic trappings of BAM’s Howard Gilman Opera House,” our critic writes. The shows are among our picks for entertainment in New York City.
Debi Del Grande
Read our weekend roundup for more things to do in New York, or go to the Arts home page for the stories mentioned here and more.
‘Conclave’ Review: Serpents and Doves Amok in the Vatican
Skeletons and Madonnas Lead Mexico’s Graphic Arts Revolution
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