يحاول ذهب - حر
And Still They Rise
December 2023 - January 2024
|Harper's BAZAAR - US
How a community - and a legacy - of black playwrights and theater-makers has transformed the american stage
In 1959, Lorraine Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun arrived on the Great White Way, as Broadway was (unironically) nicknamed. At the time, in Montgomery, Alabama, bus segregation had recently been toppled. In Ghana, independence from Great Britain had been achieved. It was the precipice of the 1960s, a period of radical change.

It was against that backdrop that Hansberry, a 28-year-old Black woman from Chicago, made her Broadway debut with a play about a working-class family on the city's South Side, where she had grown up. With A Raisin in the Sun, she brought three Black women to the apex of American theater: Lena Younger, the matriarch with a sense of humor and spiritual conviction; Ruth Younger, a domestic who was exploring reproductive choices and longed for a place in the world; and Beneatha, a hardheaded feminist and brilliant yet sophomoric future doctor.

It would be 17 years before another production written by a Black woman appeared on Broadway; Ntozake Shange's for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the Rainbow Is Enuf premiered at the Booth Theatre in the fall of 1976. Shange, who also performed in early versions of for colored girls, brought a new dramatic form to the stage: the choreo-poem, which combines poetry, movement, music, and song. Seven Black female characters act as a chorus of autoethnographic voices and bodies telling deeply resonant and radically honest stories of the cruelty they've endured and the love they've carried inside their tender interior lives.

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Harper's BAZAAR - US
WHY DON'T YOU...?
For our Art issue, LYNETTE NYLANDER urges you to look to these VORACIOUS ART COLLECTORS, who also happen to be WOMEN of great STYLE and TASTE, for LESSONS on HOW to incorporate BEAUTY into your HOME and LIFE
2 mins
December 2025 / January 2026
Harper's BAZAAR - US
IN-DEMAND Hands
FACIALS are no longer about just the SPA you go to or what your CHEEKBONES look like afterward but the NAME of the AESTHETICIAN who SCULPTS your face. How APPOINTMENTS with “IT” FACIALISTS have become the ultimate skincare STATUS SYMBOL.
4 mins
December 2025 / January 2026
Harper's BAZAAR - US
IN the PAINT
One of the most CLASSICAL FORMS of ART-MAKING, PAINTING has assumed a new CURRENCY in the age of AI and DIGITAL MEDIA. We spoke with SEVEN WOMEN ARTISTS who are REIMAGINING its TRADITIONS and RESHAPING them in their OWN IMAGE.
8 mins
December 2025 / January 2026
Harper's BAZAAR - US
We're COMING UNDONE...and So Are Our CLOTHES
The SPRING COLLECTIONS were packed with CLOTHES that appeared to be FALLING OFF the body: LOOSE layers, RIPPED fabrics, UNZIPPED jeans. The WEIGHT of the WORLD feels particularly HEAVY right now; can FASHION reflect our longing to LIVE and LET GO?
6 mins
December 2025 / January 2026
Harper's BAZAAR - US
HOW MELANIE WARD RESTYLED FASHION
FOR MELANIE WARD, fashion was never about fantasy or escape but a way to live freely and fully in the moment. The London-born stylist, who passed away in October, helped reshape fashion—and Harper's Bazaar—in the 1990s and 2000s with her modernist eye and collaborations with Helmut Lang and Calvin Klein.
1 min
December 2025 / January 2026
Harper's BAZAAR - US
How do you SURVIVE UNTHINKABLE TRAGEDY and still find BEAUTY in the WORLD?
ON SEPTEMBER 24, 2021, the poet, visual artist, and novelist Rachel Eliza Griffiths married the author Salman Rushdie. That same day, her best friend, the poet Kamilah Aisha Moon, who was set to speak at their wedding, died suddenly and unexpectedly. Within the first year of their marriage, Griffiths and Rushdie faced tragedy once again when Rushdie was nearly killed in a knife attack at a reading. In The Flower Bearers, out this January, Griffiths writes about what it takes to not only survive these compound tragedies but still feel alive and love and to still look at the world as a poet. We live in a time of incalculable losses. Most of us are trying to figure out how to live our lives while staying awake—how to reckon with what's gone without being overcome by sadness. Griffiths’s memoir, excerpted below, is a guide, in part, to living with and through grief and an ode to the everyday miracle of endurance.
5 mins
December 2025 / January 2026
Harper's BAZAAR - US
Mérida's MAGIC
An ARTISTIC SPIRIT animates the city with a distinctive BEAUTY and laid-back ENERGY that feels WORLDS AWAY from nearby Cancún
2 mins
December 2025 / January 2026
Harper's BAZAAR - US
The ART of REFUSAL
DEREK C. BLASBERG talks to artist AMY SHERALD about how her blockbuster exhibition, \"AMERICAN SUBLIME,\" landed at the BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART and why INTEGRITY still MATTERS-in ART and in LIFE
6 mins
December 2025 / January 2026
Harper's BAZAAR - US
MEGHAN'S Moment
After years of being subsumed by OTHER PEOPLE'S NARRATIVES, the DUCHESS of SUSSEX is ready to AUTHOR her OWN NEXT CHAPTER
14 mins
December 2025 / January 2026
Harper's BAZAAR - US
Wildest DREAMS
There's never been a better time to go on SAFARI, with CAMPS that prioritize CONSERVATION delivering ONCE-in-a-LIFETIME experiences
2 mins
November 2025
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