Art Designs Tp Mark the Beginning of Your Mental Health Recovery

  • A heartwarming walk with Paul Merson every bit he trades in booze for birdsong

    Merson discusses his demons while discovering the countryside for the offset time - just this is more therapy session than BBC nature bear witness

    Paul Merson in Hutton-le-Hole on the North York Moors on his BBC show A Walk Through My Life
  • Sam Ryder may finally provide Great britain a winning shot at Eurovision

    The charismatic TikTok metallic head is the United kingdom's Eurovision entry for 2022, and may stand for our best run a risk in decades

  • The Staircase, review: a corkscrewing whodunit to friction match the hit documentary

    This HBO dramatisation of the popular Netflix documentary keeps y'all hooked with its central mystery: did Michael Peterson kill his wife?

  • The White Card, Northern Phase, review: too many statistics, non enough story

    Claudia Rankine's play about race and privilege deals with important themes, but makes for unconvincing art

Annotate and analysis

  • Sam Ryder may finally provide Great britain a winning shot at Eurovision

    The charismatic TikTok metallic head is the United kingdom's Eurovision entry for 2022, and may represent our best chance in decades

    Sam Ryder UK Eurovision song contest winner winning entry 2022 official music
  • Why I will never watch a Curiosity film

    The superhero leviathan is infantalising viewers and impoverishing our culture

    Zendaya and Tom Holland in Spider-Man: No Way Home, 2021
  • No-i cares if Boris doesn't lookout Lorraine Kelly – the Blair era is over

    The Left's joy over the PM's 'gaffe' is misguided – working-class voters care about action, not syrupy 'we're merely like you' Idiot box references

    Boris Johnson on the campaign trail in the north-west of England
  • Lucy Worsley sensationally unbuttons the murderous scandals of Victorian women

    A new Radio four series – replete with sex and scandal – explores the motives of Victorian killers with a contemporary feminist twist

    Broadcaster and historian Lucy Worsley

Reviews

  • Punchy, playful and sexy, this Oklahoma! is an absolute knockout

    Kickoff seen in New York, this revelatory product, now at the Young Vic, interrogates the landmark musical to within an inch of its life

    Oklahoma! at The Young Vic
  • Serse: a ascension star shines in this destructive slice of Handel

    This 1738 opera shows the composer at his most mischievous – and this performance at St Martin-in-the-Fields was splendidly done

    Emily D'Angelo in Serse, at St Martin-in-the-Fields
  • Age of Rage: this timeless, claret-and-thunder tragedy is a marvel to lookout

    Ivo van Hove's latest, at the Barbican, is a mash-upwards of plays written past Euripides and Aeschylus – and it works a care for

    Age of Rage, at the Barbican
  • Kermode & Mayo's Have, review: the kings of film chat set their own rules in commencement mail-BBC podcast

    The podcast's hefty 2-60 minutes run-time might exist a fleck over-blimp, but the BBC may come to regret letting these proven ratings-winners get

    Mark Kermode and Simon Mayo
  • The White Bill of fare, Northern Phase, review: also many statistics, non plenty story

    Claudia Rankine's play nigh race and privilege deals with of import themes, but makes for unconvincing art

    Estella Daniels Charlotte in The White Card
  • Arica, review: a grimly enthralling tale of corporate delinquency

    Filmmakers tell the story of the Swedish mining company Boliden and twenty,000 tons of toxic waste dumped outside the Chilean boondocks of Arica

    A scene from Arica

Behind the music

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

Tonight's Goggle box

  • What's on Tv set tonight: The Terror: Infamy, Tehran 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 backside motion-picture show and Telly'southward greatest hits – and about fascinating flops

  • Sophie Ward interview: every bit a model, I made sure my hotel door was locked

    The actress and 'face of the 80s' talks near writing novels and her regret well-nigh her famous father

    Sophie Ward photographed in east London for The Telegraph
  • You lot can't trust a word in this unbelievable biography

    This maddening novel is a faux-biography total of puzzles and contradictions – but all its meta trappings tin't make upward for poor writing

    Book review The Unauthorised Biography of Ezra Maas by Daniel James
  • Did Bobby Kennedy murder Marilyn Monroe?

    A new Netflix documentary concludes that Marilyn was not 'deliberately killed'. Only one former LAPD investigator disagrees

    'She would have taken down the Presidency': Marilyn Monroe in 1953
  • The Opposite of a Person by Lieke Marsman review: a fizzing tale of heartbreak and climate disaster

    The Dutch poet laureate moves betwixt prose, poetry and script-like dialogue in this inventive, and excellent translated, novel

    Book review The Opposite of a Person by Lieke Marsman
  • Donald Baechler, divisive New York painter who paid prisoners and drunks to draw for him – obituary

    His cartoonish images, often culled from art by social outcasts, were touted in the 1980s as a Pop Art renaissance but reviled past others

    Donald Baecher pictured at a New York charity auction in 2008
  • Radical Landscapes: a bracingly different kind of ramble through the British countryside

    Tate Liverpool's new show is but partly green and often far from pleasant – and that's precisely what's and then enjoyable well-nigh it

    Peter Kennard's Haywain with Cruise Missiles (1980)
  • How Venice transformed Monet's art

    Equally one of his Venetian views goes on auction, our writer charts the creative person'south obsession with the metropolis'due south light and water

    La Serenissima: Monet's Le Grand Canal et Santa Maria della Salute (detail)
  • The trouble-making life of 'large fame hunter' Ron Galella

    Brando knocked out his teeth; Richard Burton had him beaten up; Jackie Onassis sued him. But the pioneering paparazzo had no regrets

    In your face: Priscilla Presley, photographed by Ron Galella, 1980

In depth

More than stories

  • Liam Neeson has officially left the 'Abolish Club'

    Neeson's brutally honest cameo in Donald Glover's subversive comedy Atlanta marks the end of a virtually-perfect celebrity amends tour

    'I am sorry': Liam Neeson
  • Punchy, playful and sexy, this Oklahoma! is an absolute knockout

    First seen in New York, this revelatory production, now at the Young Vic, interrogates the landmark musical to inside an inch of its life

    Oklahoma! at The Young Vic
  • Serse: a rising star shines in this subversive slice of Handel

    This 1738 opera shows the composer at his most mischievous – and this performance at St Martin-in-the-Fields was splendidly done

    Emily D'Angelo in Serse, at St Martin-in-the-Fields
  • Age of Rage: this timeless, blood-and-thunder tragedy is a marvel to lookout man

    Ivo van Hove'southward latest, at the Barbican, is a mash-upward of plays written by Euripides and Aeschylus – and it works a treat

    Age of Rage, at the Barbican
  • Kermode & Mayo'south Take, review: the kings of film chat set their ain rules in outset post-BBC podcast

    The podcast's hefty two-hour run-time might be a scrap over-stuffed, but the BBC may come up to regret letting these proven ratings-winners get

    Mark Kermode and Simon Mayo
  • Breathless tension, Emmy awards and at present Glenn Close: why Israeli series Tehran has got it all

    The superbly crafted Apple tree Goggle box+ series is tense, atmospheric and offers some clever cultural commentary

    Glenn Close as Marjan Montazeri in series two of Tehran
  • What'due south on Boob tube tonight: The Terror: Infamy, Tehran and more than

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

    Cristina Rodlo in The Terror: Infamy
  • TV Baftas 2022 predictions: who should win... and who will win

    Russell T Davies's Aids crisis drama It's a Sin is being tipped to bulldoze the competition – but should it?

    (From top left): Olly Alexander in It's a Sin, Kate Winslet in Mare of Easttown, Rose Matafeo in Starstruck, and Matthew Macfadyen in Succession

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

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