Why Should I Read Strange the Dreamer

  • Henry V, review: Kit Harington echoes Volodymyr Zelensky as real life upstages art

    This Donmar Warehouse product sees the Game of Thrones star in his commanding element every bit a playboy-turned-rex

    Kit Harington in Henry V, at the Donmar Warehouse
  • Permit's exist honest, people sentry Naked Attraction for one reason and one reason just

    Enough of the posturing, Channel 4, just admit you lot like seeing people without their clothes on too

  • 'We're non the PC constabulary!': what sensitivity readers really practice

    They've been defendant of censorship by 'cancelled' authors such equally Kate Clanchy. Merely how much power do these readers really accept?

  • Shirley Hughes tribute: 'If yous've read Dogger, you can probably relax virtually other literature'

    Get to Dostoevsky when you lot can – with Shirley Hughes's books almost love and loss and sacrifice, yous've already got the basics covered

  • Joe vs Carole, review: merely when you lot thought you lot were safe from Tiger Male monarch – here comes the drama

    Peacock'southward drama series based on Joe Exotic and Carole Baskin manages to brand these two characters more than just a cliche

Annotate and analysis

  • We got Mary Whitehouse wrong: in many means she was a strength for good

    Nosotros have sneered at the campaigner for too long. She was often right - just never when it came to the arts

    Divisive figure: Mary Whitehouse campaigning in 1984
  • Shirley Hughes tribute: 'If you've read Dogger, you tin can probably relax about other literature'

    Get to Dostoevsky when you tin can – with Shirley Hughes's books near love and loss and sacrifice, you've already got the basics covered

    Shirley Hughes, author of Dogger and other children's classics, has died aged 94
  • In her children's books, Shirley Hughes captured the magic of the ordinary

    The author and illustrator behind Dogger – and more 270 other classics – created a world of glorious, reassuringly everyday adventures

    Shirley Hughes with a Dogger toy
  • At a fourth dimension of crisis, we still huddle round the wireless

    The spirit and bravery of ordinary Ukrainians has been brought to life on the airwaves

    A soldier walks with a Ukrainian national flag in Kyiv

Reviews

  • Henry V, review: Kit Harington echoes Volodymyr Zelensky equally real life upstages art

    This Donmar Warehouse production sees the Game of Thrones star in his commanding element as a playboy-turned-rex

    Kit Harington in Henry V, at the Donmar Warehouse
  • When We Expressionless Awaken proves it – Ibsen was astonishingly mod

    Performed mostly in Norwegian, the Coronet's staging comes beyond as a rich written report in female person self-decision shaped by patriarchal ethics

    Andrea Bræin Hovig and James Browne in When We Dead Awaken, at the Coronet Theatre
  • The ex-Festival of Brexit begins in Paisley – with an irritating whimper

    The opening slice in the eight-calendar month Unboxed festival transforms Paisley Abbey into a matter of wonder but offers nothing of any substance

    About Us, at Paisley Abbey
  • Our Generation is a frank, fond tribute to the desperation and ecstasy of generation Snapchat

    Verbatim theatre queen Alecky Blythe is back at the National Theatre with an epic drama drawn from 600 hours of recorded testimony

    Rachelle Diedericks, Anushka Chakravarti, Stephanie Street and Anna Burnett in Our Generation, at the National Theatre
  • Against the Ice, review: polar-carry attacks, hallucinations and homicidal rage

    Netflix's latest feature tells the true story of a grim Chill expedition, but the script is light on menstruation flavour and dramatic power

    Nikolaj Coster-Waldau and Joe Cole in Netflix's Against the Ice
  • Postwar Modernistic: New Art in Britain, 1945-1965, review: aren't we all feeling quite glum enough already?

    The Barbican's attempt to reassess post-war art is substantial – but it's also patchy, fails at its central chore, and proves heavy-going

    Roger Mayne, God Save the Queen (Hampden Crescent, Paddington), 1957 (detail)

Backside the music

Stone'south untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time

Tonight's Television

  • What's on TV tonight: Your Trunk Uncovered with Kate Garraway, West Side Story and more

    Your complete guide to the week's television, films and sport, across terrestrial and digital platforms

Screen Secrets

A regular series telling the stories behind film and TV's greatest hits – and most fascinating flops

  • 'We're not the PC police!': what sensitivity readers really do

    They've been accused of censorship past 'cancelled' authors such as Kate Clanchy. But how much power do these readers actually accept?

    Kate Clanchy parted ways with her publisher Picador earlier this year following a Twitter storm
  • Shirley Hughes tribute: 'If yous've read Dogger, you lot can probably relax about other literature'

    Get to Dostoevsky when you tin can – with Shirley Hughes's books about love and loss and sacrifice, you've already got the basics covered

    Shirley Hughes, author of Dogger and other children's classics, has died aged 94
  • In her children's books, Shirley Hughes captured the magic of the ordinary

    The author and illustrator backside Dogger – and more than 270 other classics – created a world of glorious, reassuringly everyday adventures

    Shirley Hughes with a Dogger toy
  • 'Who will tell you news of my death?' Ukrainian soldier goes viral reciting Persian honey poem ahead of battle

    Zhenya Perepelitsa, a member of the civilian territorial defense forces who in one case lived in Iran, read a poem to camera in Persian

    Zhenya Perepelitsa
  • The Barbican at 40: the brutalist nightmare we've come to love

    It looked out of appointment earlier it even opened but is now one of Britain'south cultural jewels

    Theatre of dreams: The Barbican Centre has staged memorable events in its time
  • How will the war in Ukraine affect the large auction houses?

    A number of the well-nigh high-profile lots coming upwards are by artists popular amid Russians

    René Magritte's The Empire of Light (L'Empire des lumières), guaranteed at around £45 million, is likely to register the highest price of the week at Sotheby's
  • Postwar Modern: New Art in Britain, 1945-1965, review: aren't we all feeling quite glum enough already?

    The Barbican's attempt to reassess post-war art is substantial – but it'south also patchy, fails at its central task, and proves heavy-going

    Roger Mayne, God Save the Queen (Hampden Crescent, Paddington), 1957 (detail)
  • Life Through a Royal Lens, review: an engrossing look at the royal family'southward rapport with the camera

    This terrific evidence at Kensington Palace traces the ways in which British sovereigns have engaged with photography

    The Queen in Garter Robes

In depth

More than stories

  • We got Mary Whitehouse wrong: in many ways she was a force for good

    Nosotros have sneered at the apostle for too long. She was often right - just never when it came to the arts

    Divisive figure: Mary Whitehouse campaigning in 1984
  • The Barbican at 40: the brutalist nightmare we've come to love

    It looked out of date before it even opened but is at present one of United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland'south cultural jewels

    Theatre of dreams: The Barbican Centre has staged memorable events in its time
  • Henry 5, review: Kit Harington echoes Volodymyr Zelensky as real life upstages art

    This Donmar Warehouse product sees the Game of Thrones star in his commanding chemical element as a playboy-turned-king

    Kit Harington in Henry V, at the Donmar Warehouse
  • Let'due south be honest, people scout Naked Attraction for one reason and i reason simply

    Plenty of the posturing, Channel 4, just admit yous like seeing people without their dress on likewise

     Anna Richardson presents Naked Attraction
  • 'We're not the PC police force!': what sensitivity readers really do

    They've been defendant of censorship by 'cancelled' authors such equally Kate Clanchy. But how much ability practise these readers actually accept?

    Kate Clanchy parted ways with her publisher Picador earlier this year following a Twitter storm
  • Shirley Hughes tribute: 'If y'all've read Dogger, you can probably relax about other literature'

    Get to Dostoevsky when you can – with Shirley Hughes's books almost dear and loss and sacrifice, you've already got the basics covered

    Shirley Hughes, author of Dogger and other children's classics, has died aged 94
  • Joe vs Carole, review: merely when you lot thought you were safe from Tiger Rex – here comes the drama

    Peacock's drama series based on Joe Exotic and Carole Baskin manages to brand these two characters more than just a cliche

    Kate McKinnon as Carol Baskin
  • When We Dead Awaken proves it – Ibsen was astonishingly mod

    Performed mostly in Norwegian, the Coronet'due south staging comes across as a rich study in female person cocky-decision shaped by patriarchal ethics

    Andrea Bræin Hovig and James Browne in When We Dead Awaken, at the Coronet Theatre

fraserlonly1967.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/

0 Response to "Why Should I Read Strange the Dreamer"

Enregistrer un commentaire

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel