World War One
The Silver Tassie, National TheatreThursday, 24 April 2014![]() "I don't think it makes a good play, but it's a remarkable one," Sean O'Casey famously remarked of The Silver Tassie, his late-1920s drama about the depredations of war, and how simultaneously right and wrong he was. To be sure, his four-act play... Read more... |
The Crimson Field, BBC OneMonday, 07 April 2014![]() The BBC is going to reap a rich harvest from The Crimson Field. Sarah Phelps’s drama impresses for a whole number of reasons that will score with viewers: there's the closed community and class elements we know so well from the likes of Downton, as... Read more... |
10 Questions for Screenwriter Sarah PhelpsFriday, 04 April 2014![]() In a hectic writing career spanning theatre, radio, film and TV, Sarah Phelps can lay claim to such milestone moments of popular culture as both the return of Den Watts to EastEnders and his subsequent demise in 2005, and writing the screenplay for... Read more... |
Lest We Forget, English National Ballet, BarbicanThursday, 03 April 2014![]() Taken together, the memorial accoutrements of the First World War are probably this country's most highly developed, and widely experienced, discourse of public history. Through two-minute silences, poppies, public monuments, and near-univeral... Read more... |
Cabell, BBC Concert Orchestra, Lockhart, QEHTuesday, 01 April 2014![]() Where did all the terrific programming energy of last year’s The Rest is Noise festival go? One answer – surprising given the orchestra’s former Friday night lite status – is into a two-concert adventure by the BBCCO. World to Come, World Once Known... Read more... |
theartsdesk in Calais: Monument, Musée des Beaux-ArtsSunday, 30 March 2014![]() Were it not for the bombs which rained down on Calais, its current Musée des Beaux-Arts would not exist. The 1966 building was part of a civic reconstruction programme, so it too is a war memorial of sorts. And it's now playing host to an exhibition... Read more... |
I Was There, BBC TwoSaturday, 15 March 2014![]() We have already seen a lot of World War I on television this year, and clearly we’re going to be getting a great deal more before it's out. Whether it’s a “celebration” season, or the diametrical opposite, or just that looser term, commemoration, is... Read more... |
37 Days, BBC TwoFriday, 07 March 2014![]() Hitherto, it has been routine for the average citizen to observe that while they could understand the causes of World War Two, getting a grip on why the world went to war in 1914 has been like trying to learn Mandarin while blindfolded and riding a... Read more... |
Nurses go to war in The Crimson FieldWednesday, 05 March 2014![]() It's going to be a long slog through the mud and blood of the Great War commemorations, but we're going to learn a lot along the way. Coming up next month on BBC One is The Crimson Field, a new drama about nurses on the Western Front in 1915.... Read more... |
The Great War in Portraits, National Portrait GallerySunday, 02 March 2014![]() Telling a story through an exhibition can be a bad idea, partly because it seems a little pedestrian but mainly because it runs the risk of using art as illustration, glibly treating paintings as if they were objective visual records. In its title,... Read more... |
The Edwardian Grand Designer, Channel 4Monday, 24 February 2014![]() Britain’s last castle, Drogo, may be only just over a century old, but repair work is going on in a big way – it’s currently the National Trust’s largest-scale restoration project. That provided the excuse for the Time Team special The... Read more... |
DVD: WingsFriday, 14 February 2014![]() The silent-era Wings is not a subtle film. Director William A. Wellman’s action-packed World War One tale of loyalty, love and war is also, at just short of two-and-a-half hours, long. At the time of its release in 1927, the film news bulletin Movie... Read more... |
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