Preview
Glasgow International Comedy Festival 2015 launchTuesday, 27 January 2015The Glasgow International Comedy Festival was launched last night (the day after Burns Night) at the Leicester Square Theatre in London, with Stewart Lee, Rob Deering, Simon Munnery, Janey Godley and others giving a taster of what's to come in... Read more... |
Preview: John Coltrane's A Love SupremeFriday, 05 December 2014John Coltrane’s album A Love Supreme, recorded 50 years ago next week, is second only to Miles Davis' Kind of Blue as a revered document of jazz recording. Inspired by Coltrane’s spiritual awakening on overcoming his addiction to heroin and alcohol... Read more... |
Seven days of sci-fiSunday, 23 November 2014Welcome to the future; welcome to the ever-present now. Sci-fi is evergreen – perhaps because, unlike other fictional forms, its primary focus is not one style or historic period. It is constantly holding a slightly warped mirror up to our... Read more... |
ReVoice! 2014: Welcoming the cream of international jazz singing to LondonSaturday, 04 October 2014Acclaimed British jazz singer Georgia Mancio celebrates five years of ReVoice!, her festival of jazz song, with an expanded event – now twice its original length – beginning next week. Mancio’s programming combines some of the most charismatic and... Read more... |
LFF 2014: Programme LaunchWednesday, 03 September 2014A pair of Oscar hopefuls that take wildly divergent perspectives on World War II were confirmed today as the opening and closing night films of the 58th annual BFI London Film Festival, running 8-19 October at a range of venues across the capital.... Read more... |
First Person: Disabled artists take on the worldSunday, 31 August 2014The audience comment I most want to hear during next week's Unlimited Festival is: this show has transformed my perception of disability. We got that over and over and over during the first Unlimited Festival, which ran as part of the Cultural... Read more... |
RE:naissance: Festival under the influenceTuesday, 29 April 2014Shakespeare's ubiquitous “planetary influence” is well-documented. As Stephen Marche points out in How Shakespeare Changed Everything, not much from our sex lives to the assassination of Lincoln remains untouched. And, of course, there's the... Read more... |
What Graeae did nextSunday, 13 April 2014As an 11-year-old, I used to love writing my address as My Bedroom, 50 Ridsdale Rd, Sherwood Rise, Nottingham, England, Great Britain, The World, The Universe. We belong to ourselves, but our sense of belonging is also about people and places... Read more... |
Barry is ready for her close-upWednesday, 02 April 2014The idea for Day to Go – the show takes its name from a bus ticket – sprang from my own bus journeys around Barry and from a desire to make a piece of theatre specific and relevant to the town. I persuaded a local company to lend me a bus for a few... Read more... |
Preview: Martin Amis's EnglandWednesday, 19 March 2014On Sunday night, you can hear Martin Amis sound off about Englishness. An advance selection of extracts from the interview were published in the Radio Times on Tuesday. The reaction from the press was instantaneous: Amis is always good copy. The... Read more... |
I Found My Horn: Afterlife of a BookMonday, 17 March 2014When a book is published, there are broadly speaking three alternative fates which lie in wait. It goes global, it sinks without trace, or it sells modestly and steadily to the readership for whom it was intended. There is, however, another... Read more... |
Preview: Wilfred Bagshaw's Time EmporiumSaturday, 08 March 2014Immersive theatre is a wonderful thing. It has closed up the cosy distancing of actors appearing on stage, the silent, passive audience below in the darkness; it has shaken up the way classic stories can be told – rebooting time-worn plays; and it... Read more... |