theartsdesk Q&A: director Stefano Sollima on the relevance of true crime story 'The Monster of Florence'

Q&A - DIRECTOR STEFANO SOLLIMA On the relevance of true crime 'The Monster of Florence'

The director of hit TV series 'Gomorrah' examines another dark dimension of Italian culture

In his celebrated TV-series Gomorrah (based on the bestseller of the same name by author Roberto Saviano) Italian director Stefano Sollima depicted the mafia ridden neighbourhoods of Naples in its rawest form – without myth, without any gloomy underworld charm or even the slightest hint of supposed gangster morality. The message Sollima wanted to get across was clear: there are no role models, no heroes. No one is happy here. 

Frances Wilson: Electric Spark - The Enigma of Muriel Spark review - the matter of fact

★★★★ FRANCES WILSON: ELECTRIC SPARK - THE ENIGMA OF MURIEL SPARK Frances Wilson employs her full artistic power to keep pace with Spark’s fantastic and fugitive life

Frances Wilson employs her full artistic power to keep pace with Spark’s fantastic and fugitive life

How do you tell the story of a person’s mind? In the preface to Electric Spark: The Enigma of Muriel Spark, published this year by Bloomsbury, Frances Wilson points out that biography was one of her subject’s own fixations.

Spark’s first full-length book, Child of Light, reinterpreted the life of Mary Shelley by means of a novel two-part structure: half “Recollection” and half criticism. She went on to write several literary biographies and her fiction is populated by chroniclers, libellers, and legacy-obsessed pensioners.

Natalia Ginzburg: The City and the House review - a dying art

Dick Davis renders this analogue love-letter in polyphonic English

Many readers and writers think of epistolary novels as old-fashioned, just as letter writing itself can seem a bit quaint nowadays. The genre became popular during the 18th and 19th centuries following the success of Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa (1749) and of later Gothic novels like Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) and Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1897).

Poor Clare, Orange Tree Theatre review - saints cajole us sinners

★ POOR CLARE, ORANGE TREE THEATRE Chira Atik's award-winning comedy packs a punch

Funny and clever show illuminated by a dazzling debut from Arsema Thomas

What am I, a philosophical if not political Marxist whose hero is Antonio Gramsci, doing in Harvey Nichols buying Comme des Garçons linen jackets, Church brogues and Mulberry shades? It’s 1987 and I do wear it well though…

That Bastard, Puccini!, Park Theatre review - inventive comic staging of the battle of the Bohèmes

★★★★ THAT BASTARD, PUCCINI!, PARK THEATRE James Inverne enjoyably reconstructs the rivalry between Puccini and Leoncavallo

James Inverne enjoyably reconstructs the rivalry between Puccini and Leoncavallo

Before Luigi Illica wrote the libretti for Puccini’s Tosca and Madama Butterfly, he had joined the composer as the librettist in a race to stage the first production of La Bohème. The race was against Ruggero Leoncavallo, a composer Illica had once collaborated with on a libretto  for Puccini, his Manon Lescaut.

theartsdesk at the Ravenna Festival 2025 - Cervantes, Beethoven and Byron transfigured

RAVENNA FESTIVAL 2025 Cervantes, Beethoven and Byron transfigured

Muti revitalised by young musicians, and a three-year theatre project reaches completion

Anyone seeking local genius in an international festival should look no further than the annual Ravenna concerts from Riccardo Muti – Neapolitan by birth, Ravennate by adoption – with his Luigi Cherubini Youth Orchestra. Well, maybe a little further if you have basic Italian: 2025 sees the completion of a second walkabout theatre trilogy involving citizens of Ravenna and beyond, masterminded by two greats equal to Muti in their own unique ways, Ermanna Montanari and Marco Martinelli.

'Classic-era prog’s Olympian pinnacle': Pink Floyd's 'Echoes' returns in their restored Pompeii concert film and as Nick Mason's band's vinyl hit

CLASSIC-ERA PROG'S OLYMPIAN PINNACLE Pink Floyd's 'Echoes' returns

The band's legendary track from 1971 resurfaces not once, but twice

Pink Floyd’s “Echoes”, the ineffable progressive rock epic that occupies side two of 1971’s Meddle, is having a moment. Nick Mason’s Saucerful of Secrets released a sensational one-sided 12-inch vinyl version of the track on Record Store Day, April 12. Recorded at the Centennial Hall in Frankfurt last August, the 23.04-minutes single – which plays from the centre outwards – reached number six in the vinyl chart, dropped, and is rising again.

theartsdesk Q&A: Gary Oldman on playing John Cheever in 'Parthenope' and beating the booze

Exclusive: A candid interview with the master actor

Gary Oldman has always lived life to the fullest, on screen and off. Maybe that's why he is often at his best in his pitch-perfect portraits of real-life personae such as Winston Churchill in Darkest Hour and Herman J Mankiewicz in Mank. He now stars as the bibulous middle-aged American author John Cheever in Parthenope, Paolo Sorrentino's latest lush homage to Italy's recent past.