Happy Mother Day for Mother in Law Clip Art

  • Grace, series two, review: John Simm'due south gloomy detective looks set up to get an ITV staple

    ITV's accommodation of Peter James's crime novels makes a solid render with some superb, layered character acting from its lead

    John Simm as DSI Roy Grace
  • BBC'due south 'nearly ambitious ecology serial nonetheless' looks more like a travel jolly

    Our Changing Planet is too chilled out near global warming - information technology needs to make us change our behaviour towards the natural world

  • The fragile artworks you volition see, but can never touch

    Using holograms ways an Edgar Degas sculpture worth more £20m can exist 'exhibited' across the world without any risk of damage

  • Nick Mason's Saucerful of Secrets, review: glam-rock swagger and fierce experimentalism

    The Pinkish Floyd drummer and co dazzled the Royal Albert Hall with 2 hours of tempo-shifting nuttiness from the ring's formative years

  • Ed Sheeran goes metal – simply still has the globe as his choir

    The troubadour raised the roof at Dublin's Croke Park with every musical mode imaginable. But his songcraft and charisma shone through

Annotate and analysis

  • How Orwell'south stab at socialist propaganda ended upwards every bit an attack on 'the stupid cult of Russia'

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

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

    The streaming behemothic'southward plummeting subscriber numbers can only mean ane matter for cinema: more films like The Adam Project, and no more than Romas

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

    The Killing Eve star'south Westward Terminate debut seems to exist a hit with fans. But the transition from screen to stage doesn't always go smoothly

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

Reviews

  • 'He manages to make me look like a blond Hitler': Alan Bennett'south pandemic diaries reviewed

    At 86, the playwright was already finer locked down. His journal, House Arrest, is filled with elegiac memories and literary gossip

    National Treasure: playwright Alan Bennett
  • Nick Mason'due south Saucerful of Secrets, review: glam-rock swagger and fierce experimentalism

    The Pink Floyd drummer and co dazzled the Royal Albert Hall with ii hours of tempo-shifting nuttiness from the band'south formative years

    'Watch out for some crowd-surfing': Nick Mason's Saucerful of Secrets
  • Ed Sheeran goes metal – but still has the world as his choir

    The troubadour raised the roof at Dublin's Croke Park with every musical manner imaginable. But his songcraft and charisma shone through

    Edtallica: Ed Sheeran rocks out at Croke Park
  • Renaud Capuçon and Martha Argerich on stage in Aix-En-Provence
  • Sibyl, Barbican review: William Kentridge blows upwardly the future, in spectacular fashion

    The South African artist has channeled his visual obsessions into a powerful, prophetic 40-minute masterwork

    'A powerful, elusive mix': Sibyl, at the Barbican
  • 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 establish themselves out of fashion

    So Solid Crew's Lisa Maffia, bottom left, now runs a hairdresser in Margate

Behind the music

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

This evening'due south Television

  • What'southward on Television set this evening: Bling Band: Hollywood Heist, Piers Morgan and Donald Trump, and more

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

Screen Secrets

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

  • What'south on Goggle box tonight: Bling Ring: Hollywood Heist, Piers Morgan and Donald Trump, and more than

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

    Bling Ring: Hollywood Heist
  • 'He manages to make me await like a blond Hitler': Alan Bennett's pandemic diaries reviewed

    At 86, the playwright was already effectively locked down. His journal, House Arrest, is filled with elegiac memories and literary gossip

    National Treasure: playwright Alan Bennett
  • A broken-down bank clerk and a month in Margate – how TS Eliot wrote The Waste Land

    In 1921, Lloyds Bank sent TS Eliot to the seaside 'to exercise nothing'. He tried – but accidentally wrote the poem of the century instead

    'On Margate Sands./ I can connect/ Nothing with nothing': Martin Parr's 1986 photograph of Margate seafront
  • What happens to pop stars subsequently their xv minutes of fame – the ugly truth

    In his new book Exit Stage Left, Nick Duerden interviews dozens of once-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 intendance what a bunch of 19-year-onetime gender-studies students think'

    And then says the boss of Forum, a new publishing banner that's offer a habitation to 'cancelled' authors

    Publish and be damned: Sussex University protesters rallying against Kathleen Stock
  • In from the cold: indigenous Sámi artists debut at the Venice Biennale

    The native people of the Arctic 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 fine 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 Republic of kazakhstan who feigned insanity to escape the Soviets

    The country's commencement e'er pavilion at the Venice Biennale plunges you into the eccentric globe of Sergey Kalmykov

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

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

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

In depth

More than stories

  • What'due south on Goggle box tonight: Bling Ring: Hollywood Heist, Piers Morgan and Donald Trump, and more

    Your complete guide to the calendar week'southward television, films and sport, beyond terrestrial and digital platforms

    Bling Ring: Hollywood Heist
  • 'He manages to make me look like a blond Hitler': Alan Bennett'south pandemic diaries reviewed

    At 86, the playwright was already effectively locked down. His periodical, House Arrest, is filled with elegiac memories and literary gossip

    National Treasure: playwright Alan Bennett
  • 10 Percentage, review: the British Phone call My Agent has star ability – but where'due south the bite?

    W1A writer John Morton's glory-packed remake of the French showbiz comedy grows into a mannerly underdog story. It's just non very funny

    Jim Broadbent, Hiftu Quasem and Jack Davenport in Ten Percent
  • Grace, series 2, review: John Simm's gloomy detective looks set up to become an ITV staple

    ITV's adaptation of Peter James's offense novels makes a solid return with some superb, layered graphic symbol acting from its lead

    John Simm as DSI Roy Grace
  • BBC'south 'most ambitious environmental series yet' looks more like a travel jolly

    Our Changing Planet is too chilled out about global warming - information technology needs to make united states change our behaviour towards the natural world

    Steve Backshall snorkles in the Maldives
  • The fragile artworks y'all will encounter, but can never impact

    Using holograms means an Edgar Degas sculpture worth more than £20m tin be 'exhibited' across the world without any risk of impairment

    Edgar Degas
  • Nick Stonemason's Saucerful of Secrets, review: glam-stone swagger and vehement experimentalism

    The Pink Floyd drummer and co dazzled the Royal Albert Hall with two hours of tempo-shifting nuttiness from the band's determinative years

    'Watch out for some crowd-surfing': Nick Mason's Saucerful of Secrets
  • Ed Sheeran goes metal – but yet has the world as his choir

    The troubadour raised the roof at Dublin's Croke Park with every musical way imaginable. Merely his songcraft and charisma shone through

    Edtallica: Ed Sheeran rocks out at Croke Park

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

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