politics
Edinburgh Fringe: Josie Long/ Josh WiddicombeFriday, 26 August 2011![]() Last year, Josie Long, famous for her whimsical comedy and fey delivery, decided to get serious. Disheartened by the election result, she started to do political comedy, but sadly her level of analysis was along the lines of: “Anyone who voted... Read more... |
The Hour, Series Finale, BBC TwoTuesday, 23 August 2011![]() Part of the fun of watching The Hour, in the absence of a coherent plot, convincing characters and plausible period dialogue, was ruminating on the myriad different ways it could be sliced: a grown-up Press Gang meets Mad Men? The Spy Who Came in... Read more... |
Outlook: four days in the sunshine and two fingers to the bigotsTuesday, 16 August 2011![]() At the start of September, the fourth Outlook Festival takes place in a 19th-century fort on the Croatian coast. Already this festival has become a vital point in the calendar for those involved with dubstep, grime and other UK underground scenes –... Read more... |
Riot music: we should have listened harderTuesday, 09 August 2011![]() I'm not claiming some major prescience or insight here. I am as guilty as anyone of dipping into the music of the sink estates for a small dose of frisson then returning to art and music that confirm my own worldview. But maybe, just maybe, if we... Read more... |
My Summer Reading: Comedian Tim MinchinSunday, 07 August 2011![]() Tim Minchin, the Australian minstrel comedian, is known by his catweazel hair, thickly kohled eyes and dazzlingly witty songs bashed out at a grand piano about, among other things, the debatable existence of the Almighty. Lately his repertoire of... Read more... |
My Resignation, BBC FourThursday, 04 August 2011![]() I Resign. It’s not a phrase you hear that often these days. Unlike, obviously, You’re Fired. There was a time, largely synonymous with the era when Tory toffs and grandees had sufficient private income to walk away from employment, that a chap could... Read more... |
The Light ThiefThursday, 28 July 2011![]() You don’t tend to get many films from the breakaway republics of the former Soviet Union. And certainly not from Kyrgyzstan. The Light Thief is the kind of work which schleps respectably around the festival circuit harvesting nods of approval from... Read more... |
theartsdesk in Kuala Lumpur: Culture as a WeaponSunday, 24 July 2011![]() As hot, sweaty tourists dangle their feet in pools for Thai Nibble Fish to eat the dead skin from their feet at Kuala Lumpur’s quirky Art Deco Central Market, a small theatre upstairs is packed for a play about racial divisions and the myth of... Read more... |
Loyalty, Hampstead TheatreThursday, 21 July 2011![]() Can journalists write good plays? Sarah Helm has been a Washington correspondent for The Independent during the first Gulf War in 1990, reported from Baghdad in the mid-1990s, and was based in Jerusalem for three years. So her debut play about the... Read more... |
Belarus Free Theatre: no gags on artThursday, 21 July 2011![]() Whatever the quality of the material with which they're grappling, there are two undeniable truths about the Belarusian actors who've put their already curtailed freedom on the line by coming to the Almeida Festival this week: they're skilled... Read more... |
The Hour, BBC TwoWednesday, 20 July 2011![]() Although it's a period drama set in the dim and shadowy London of 1956, The Hour can’t help reminding us that the more things change, the more inclined they feel to do a brisk U-turn and fly back to hit us in the teeth. I even wondered whether... Read more... |
theartsdesk MOT: Yes, Prime Minister, Apollo TheatreMonday, 18 July 2011![]() Situation comedy relies on strong brands, and some ideas just run and run. Yes, Prime Minister is the stage version of the long-running 1980s BBC television shows Yes Minister and Yes, Prime Minister, which memorably starred Nigel Hawthorne and Paul... Read more... |
