Jean Genet’s 1947 play has been quite a clothes-horse over the years, at times a glamorous confection dressed by designers, ...
We are in – it needs to be shouted from the rooftops every day – a golden age of British soul and jazz. It isn’t just about a ...
The return of this entertaining political drama is always welcome, though its soap-tinged mix of transatlantic politics and ...
Another day, another shooting: this is Florida, USA, where the "Stand Your Ground" self-defence law allows people to use ...
Bryony Kimmings’ new show – her first in five years – was created to celebrate the opening of Soho Walthamstow, the ...
It’s always good to welcome the opening of a new arts venue, and sadly it doesn’t happen too often in the current economic ...
From its opening scene, Le Quai des Brumes (Port of Shadows,1938) feels like a reverie, a period of sustained waiting, during ...
Many orchestral concerts leaven two or three established classics with something new or unusual. The LSO reversed that ...
Phyllida Lloyd’s production of La Bohème for Opera North is over 32 years old but still feels young. And for its audiences it ...
Guillermo del Toro strains every sinew to bring his dream film to life, steeping it in religious symbolism and the history of ...
Helping to build the careers of superb young singers is what Wigmore Hall has done for decades: I still remember Olaf Bär’s ...
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