She played a headstrong daughter in the 1970s TV series and later published a frank memoir about her battle with bipolar disorder.
Here’s what parents need to know.
Mr. Davis, who died of complications from covid-19, wrote a two-hander that became a staple of community theater after premiering on Broadway in 1981.
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The sequel to the 1988 fish-out-of-water comedy stars Eddie Murphy as an African prince.
These works, recommended by local authors and bookstore owners, remind us just how special Washington is.
Actor Patrick Page (‘Hadestown’) performs a streaming version of his one-man show for the Shakespeare Theatre Company.
Virtual film festivals, streaming concerts and socially distanced events offer escapes during the coronavirus pandemic.
The D.C.-based producer is helping to “rewrite these narratives” about Black dance music.
Also streaming online this month: a birthday celebration for lifelong opera lover Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
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Southeast Asian-inspired fable tells the tale of a plucky princess on a quest to save the world.
At the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Sonya Clark’s art is both political and deeply personal
“Tatter, Bristle and Mend” is the D.C. native’s first major career survey.
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Ssong’s Hotdog in Columbia and Bethesda has turned carnival food into fun works of art.
His photos, notably on the set of Jean-Luc Godard’s ‘Breathless,’ captured the cinematic movement’s iconoclastic spirit.
As spring approaches there are signs that museums are coming back to life.
Townsend is the writer and editor behind “Optophobia,” an improv comedy podcast about fictionalized conspiracy theories.
Here’s what parents need to know.