tue 22/10/2024

theartsdesk com, first with arts reviews, news and interviews

Ed Vulliamy
Wednesday, 23 October 2024
Ten years ago, Ian Page launched his and the Mozartists’ (then Classical Opera’s) remarkable endeavour to play music by WA Mozart 250 years after it was written, starting with a...
Nick Hasted
Tuesday, 22 October 2024
“The street I grew up in had no name and is in a country that no longer exists,” director Milisuthando Bongela begins her meditation about growing up in Transkei, a semi-fictional...
Sarah Kent
Tuesday, 22 October 2024
The Bloomsbury group’s habit of non-binary bed-hopping has frequently attracted more attention than the artworks they produced. But in their Vanessa Bell retrospective, the MK...
Harry Thorfinn-George
Tuesday, 22 October 2024
You may have heard the phrase “elevated horror” being used to describe horror films that lean more toward arthouse cinema, favouring tension and psychological turmoil over jump-...
Issy Brooks-Ward
Tuesday, 22 October 2024
In his first of a series of meditations on the sickness that was consuming him, John Donne reflected upon the special kind of paranoia that attends the ill individual. Each person...
Nick Hasted
Tuesday, 22 October 2024
The missing element is magic, the swooning sense of the romantic, spiritual and supernal which Michael Powell’s partnership with Emeric Pressburger found in the British and...
Adam Sweeting
Monday, 21 October 2024
Delirium has greeted Disney’s eight-part adaptation of Jilly Cooper’s 1988 novel Rivals (part of her Rutshire Chronicles...
India Lewis
Monday, 21 October 2024
Since Yesterday: The Untold Story of Scotland's Girl Bands is one of those films that, perhaps embarrassingly, feels very...
Gary Naylor
Monday, 21 October 2024
Theatre is a strange dish. A recipe can be stacked with delicious ingredients, cooked to exacting standards, taste-test...
Pamela Jahn
Monday, 21 October 2024
Is it mere coincidence or already a new trend? Animated films about the unlikely friendships between robots and animals are...
Kieron Tyler
Monday, 21 October 2024
Tess Parks’ fourth solo album is suffused with otherness. When lyrics are direct, they are destabilised by the etiolated,...
Kieron Tyler
Sunday, 20 October 2024
The Undertakers were central to the Merseybeat boom. The best of what they issued on single in 1963 and 1964 captured the...
Boyd Tonkin
Saturday, 19 October 2024
Every lover of folk-tales knows that the seeker has to endure dangers and setbacks before they finally win the prize. Last...
Jonathan Geddes
Saturday, 19 October 2024
The years may go by and the albums might change, but there are always a few constants with Public Service Broadcasting....
Bernard Hughes
Saturday, 19 October 2024
Last Monday my colleague Boyd Tonkin was delighted by the Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective’s playing at Hatfield House – and...
Harry Thorfinn-George
Saturday, 19 October 2024
No film tackles the knotty topic of inherited mental illness with as much gleeful abandon as Smile. Mental health has been a...
Katie Colombus
Saturday, 19 October 2024
If there’s a rough-hewn tinge to Laura Marling’s eighth album, then there’s a wildly valid reason for it. It was written...
Helen Hawkins
Friday, 18 October 2024
There is star casting, and there is casting the right star – not the same thing. The Donmar’s new production, The Fear of 13...
Helen Hawkins
Friday, 18 October 2024
John Webster’s sour, bloody tale of brotherly greed and vice has been updated by the playwright Zinnie Harris, who also...

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★★★★ WHAT WE TALK ABOUT WHEN WE TALK ABOUT ANNE FRANK, MARYLEBONE THEATRE Nathan Englander probes a divide in modern Jewish identity

★★★★ A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, OPERA NORTH One of the best and funniest

★★★ THE CRIME IS MINE Entertaining froth from a crack cast

★★★★ AURORA ORCHESTRA, COLLON, DRUMSHEDS Surround-sound magic in the super-club

★★★ SMILE 2 True to its gleefully unsubtle predecessor but with a real sense of dread this time

★★★★ PUBLIC SERVICE BROADCASTING, GLASGOW History given euphoric life

★★★ LAURA MARLING - PATTERS IN REPEAT An intimate ode to the miracle of life

★★★ KYLIE MINOGUE - TENSION II Kylie's relentless energy never fails to impress

disc of the day

Blu-ray: Michael Powell - Early Works

British film magician's apprenticeship revealed

Subscribe to theartsdesk.com

Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.

To take a subscription now simply click here.

And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?

tv

Rivals, Disney+ review - adultery, skulduggery and political incorrectness

Back to the Eighties with Jilly Cooper's tales of the rich and infamous

Disclaimer, Apple TV+ review - a misfiring revenge saga from Alfonso Cuarón

Odd casting and weak scripting aren't a temptation to keep watching

Ludwig, BBC One review - entertaining spin on the brainy detective formula

David Mitchell is a perfect fit for this super-sleuth

film

Milisuthando review - exorcising apartheid

Poetic consideration of a complex girlhood in white South Africa's black 'homelands'

theartsdesk Q&A: Anna Bogutskaya on her new book about the past decade of horror cinema

In time for Halloween, the author discusses 'Feeding the Monster' - and why she thinks horror cinema has entered a new phase

Blu-ray: Michael Powell - Early Works

British film magician's apprenticeship revealed

new music

Since Yesterday review - championing a neglected female music scene

A chronological journey through the unjustly underrated world of Scotland's women bands

Album: Tess Parks - Pomegranate

With the Brian Jonestown Massacre association concluded, psychedelic auteur reintegrates with the wider world

Music Reissues Weekly: Rain - Tomorrow Never Comes: The NYC Sessions 1967-1968

The final chapter in the story of Merseybeat pioneers The Undertakers

classical

Aurora Orchestra, Collon, Drumsheds review - surround-sound magic in the super-club

On a vast dancefloor, the chance to listen from inside the orchestra

Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective, Wigmore Hall review - warm and colourful Bartók and Brahms

Versatile chamber ensemble excels in clarinet-focused repertoire

Christian Gerhaher, Gerold Huber, Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford review - an unforgettable recital

The great German baritone in glorious voice at the Oxford International Song Festival

opera

A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Opera North review - one of the best and funniest

Perspex and bubblewrap for a Sixties take on Britten's Shakespeare

The Turn of the Screw, English National Opera review - Jamesian ambiguities chillingly preserved

Pity and terror in Ailish Tynan’s anguished Governess and Isabella Bywater’s production

theatre

Autumn, Park Theatre review - on stage as in politics, Brexit drama promises much, but loses its way
Promising production, beautifully acted, slides into side plots and confusion
The Fear of 13, Donmar Warehouse review - powerful analysis of a gross injustice
A magnificent Adrien Brody leads a moving production by Justin Martin
The Duchess [of Malfi], Trafalgar Theatre review - actors imprisoned by confused time travelling
Zinnie Harris's modern take robs the play of its tragic potential

dance

National Ballet of Canada, Sadler's Wells review - see this, and know what dance can do

Yet again, Crystal Pite proves herself a ferocious creative force, alongside fellow Canadian exports James Kudelka and Emma Portner

Nobodaddy, Teaċ Daṁsa, Dublin Theatre Festival review - supernatural song and dance odyssey

Michael Keegan-Dolan’s genius guides us through death, separation and loss

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Royal Ballet review - big, bold and ultimately brash

It may be box-office gold, but Christopher Wheeldon's adaptation fails to find a beating heart down the rabbit hole

Books

theartsdesk Q&A: Anna Bogutskaya on her new book about the past decade of horror cinema

In time for Halloween, the author discusses 'Feeding the Monster' - and why she thinks horror cinema has entered a new phase

Olga Tokarczuk: The Empusium review - paranoid prose

Antonia Lloyd-Jones translates a contagious work from a Nobel Prize winner

Stevie Smith: Not Waving But Drowning review - riding the wave

This slim and stylish new edition can't quite dispel some lurking doubts

latest comments

If Nathan killed his wife, how does he get a...

This is October 2024. Zen should have returned...

Have to disagree with the sentiment on the...

Did you need to make a stab at Richard? He said...

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