Im Leaving on a Jet Plane Dont Know When Ill Be Back Again So Remake

  • How Orwell's stab at socialist propaganda ended upwardly as an attack on 'the stupid cult of Russian federation'

    First published in 1937, The Road to Wigan Pier is a masterpiece – and then why did many leftists hate information technology?

    Novelist and journalist George Orwell
  • Is there annihilation Zadie Smith can't exercise?

    The writer showed she tin can sing beautifully, alongside all her other talents, in a Barbican performance with the BBC Symphony Orchestra

  • 'It's possible she was assassinated': Joyce Carol Oates on Marilyn Monroe

    Equally her novel Blonde gets the Hollywood treatment, Oates unmasks the real Monroe

  • The Corn is Greenish, review: Nicola Walker is unmissable in this riveting production

    The National Theatre's revival of Emlyn Williams's 1938 play is crowned by the Unforgotten star's finely calibrated performance

Comment and analysis

  • How Orwell'south stab at socialist propaganda concluded upwardly as an attack on 'the stupid cult of Russia'

    Starting time published in 1937, The Road to Wigan Pier is a masterpiece – so why did many leftists hate it?

    Novelist and journalist George Orwell
  • Victoria Coren Mitchell in Brain Reaction
  • Sorry, Oscar-hungry auteurs – the Netflix 'passion project' political party is over

    The streaming giant'south plummeting subscriber numbers can merely mean 1 thing for picture palace: more films like The Adam Project, and no more Romas

    Zoe Saldana and Ryan Reynolds in The Adam Project
  • Put your claws away, theatregoers – and give Jodie Comer a pause

    The Killing Eve star'due south Due west Cease debut seems to be a hitting with fans. But the transition from screen to stage doesn't always get smoothly

    Jodie Comer in rehearsals for Suzie Miller's play Prima Facie

Reviews

  • What happens to pop stars later their 15 minutes of fame – the ugly truth

    In his new book Exit Stage Left, Nick Duerden interviews dozens of one time-famous musicians who constitute themselves out of fashion

    So Solid Crew's Lisa Maffia, bottom left, now runs a hairdresser in Margate
  • Is at that place anything Zadie Smith can't do?

    The author showed she tin sing beautifully, aslope all her other talents, in a Barbican performance with the BBC Symphony Orchestra

    Cultural polymath: Zadie Smith
  • The Palace Papers exposes imperial stories The Crown writers can only dream of – from Andrew to Megxit

    Did Prince Harry actually consult MI6 about a therapist? Tina Brown picks up where The Diana Chronicles left off in a gripping insider account

    'The snottiest man I've ever heard in my life': the Duke and Duchess of Sussex on their wedding day in 2018
  • The Corn is Green, review: Nicola Walker is unmissable in this riveting production

    The National Theatre'due south revival of Emlyn Williams's 1938 play is crowned by the Unforgotten star's finely calibrated performance

    Dogged and dutiful: Miss Moffat (Nicola Walker)
  • Marys Seacole: a challenging, time-angle introduction to the other Florence Nightingale

    This frustrating, compelling drama at the Donmar boasts a fantastic lead performance by Kayla Meikle equally a nurse who heads to the Crimean War

    Kayla Meikle as Mary Seacole in Marys Seacole, at the Donmar
  • Punchdrunk: The Burnt City, review: non quite a theatrical Trojan equus caballus

    This major new piece of work by the immersive pioneers has some skillful ideas, simply lacks the surprise of their greatest work

    Inventive twists and turns: Punchdrunk performer Yilin Kong

Behind the music

Rock's untold stories, from ring-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time

This night'south Television receiver

  • What's on TV tonight: Snooker World Championship, Killing Eve, United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland's Got Talent and more

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

Screen Secrets

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

  • Gaslit, review: Julia Roberts shines in the forgotten story behind the Watergate scandal

    At that place'due south more to Watergate than All the President's Men, equally we run across in this captivating drama from the Usa, starring Roberts and Sean Penn

    Sean Penn as John Mitchell and Julia Roberts as Martha Mitchell in Gaslit
  • What happens to pop stars after their 15 minutes of fame – the ugly truth

    In his new book Exit Stage Left, Nick Duerden interviews dozens of one time-famous musicians who found themselves out of fashion

    So Solid Crew's Lisa Maffia, bottom left, now runs a hairdresser in Margate
  • 'I don't care what a bunch of 19-year-quondam gender-studies students recall'

    And so says the dominate of Forum, a new publishing imprint that's offering a abode to 'cancelled' authors

    Publish and be damned: Sussex University protesters rallying against Kathleen Stock
  • How Orwell's stab at socialist propaganda concluded upwards as an assail on 'the stupid cult of Russia'

    Offset published in 1937, The Route to Wigan Pier is a masterpiece – so why did many leftists detest it?

    Novelist and journalist George Orwell
  • Is there anything Zadie Smith tin can't exercise?

    The author showed she can sing beautifully, aslope all her other talents, in a Barbican operation with the BBC Symphony Orchestra

    Cultural polymath: Zadie Smith
  • In from the cold: indigenous Sámi artists debut at the Venice Biennale

    The native people of the Chill Circle are highlighting their controversial past from this weekend

    Sami artists debut Venice Biennale
  • At the Venice Biennale, surreal joys are in, Putin is out – and the stale males are hanging on

    The 59th edition of the art extravaganza pays tribute to Ukrainian heroism while delving brilliantly into the weirder corners of our minds

    In the Giardini is a temporary Ukrainian 'piazza'
  • The Van Gogh of Kazakhstan who feigned insanity to escape the Soviets

    The country's beginning ever pavilion at the Venice Biennale plunges y'all into the eccentric world of Sergey Kalmykov

    Dreamer: Sergey Kalmykov
  • Sonia Boyce, British Pavilion, Venice, review: lacks the X-cistron of genuine imaginative strangeness

    The British creative person's Venice show Feeling Her Mode is gentle and tasteful, with an underlying electric current of social critique, merely it doesn't soar

    Room 3 in Sonia Boyce's 2022 British Pavilion featuring performers Jacqui Dankworth and Sofia Jernberg

In depth

More stories

  • Gaslit, review: Julia Roberts shines in the forgotten story behind the Watergate scandal

    At that place'south more than to Watergate than All the President'due south Men, as we see in this captivating drama from the US, starring Roberts and Sean Penn

    Sean Penn as John Mitchell and Julia Roberts as Martha Mitchell in Gaslit
  • What happens to pop stars after their 15 minutes of fame – the ugly truth

    In his new volume Exit Stage Left, Nick Duerden interviews dozens of once-famous musicians who found themselves out of mode

    So Solid Crew's Lisa Maffia, bottom left, now runs a hairdresser in Margate
  • 'I don't intendance what a bunch of 19-year-old gender-studies students call up'

    So says the boss of Forum, a new publishing imprint that's offering a home to 'cancelled' authors

    Publish and be damned: Sussex University protesters rallying against Kathleen Stock
  • How Orwell's stab at socialist propaganda ended up as an attack on 'the stupid cult of Russia'

    Offset published in 1937, The Road to Wigan Pier is a masterpiece – so why did many leftists hate it?

    Novelist and journalist George Orwell
  • Is at that place anything Zadie Smith can't practice?

    The author showed she can sing beautifully, alongside all her other talents, in a Barbican functioning with the BBC Symphony Orchestra

    Cultural polymath: Zadie Smith
  • 'It's possible she was assassinated': Joyce Ballad Oates on Marilyn Monroe

    As her novel Blonde gets the Hollywood handling, Oates unmasks the real Monroe

    'Marilyn Monroe was a performance – by a woman called Norma Jeane Baker': the actress in 1946
  • Victoria Coren Mitchell in Brain Reaction
  • The Palace Papers exposes royal stories The Crown writers can just dream of – from Andrew to Megxit

    Did Prince Harry actually consult MI6 about a therapist? Tina Brown picks upward where The Diana Chronicles left off in a gripping insider account

    'The snottiest man I've ever heard in my life': the Duke and Duchess of Sussex on their wedding day in 2018

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

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