Plagiarism is no laughing matter for comedians
Chris Green: A performer has highlighted the growing problem of material being reproduced online
Inside Arts & Entertainment
Opening Doors And Windows, By James Roose-Evans
The theatre world is littered with self-styled gurus and shamans, but it is rare to find a director who is also an Anglican priest. In this charming and insightful memoir, 82-year-old James Roose-Evans takes us on a spiritual and creative journey from his literally tortured adolescence (he was prone to self-flagellation) to the twin heights of ordination in Hereford cathedral and Broadway success.
Halle Berry to receive Sherry Lansing award
Actress Halle Berry is set to receive the Sherry Lansing Leadership Award at The Hollywood Reporter's 18th Annual Women in Entertainment event on December 4.
Opera sheds new light on Tchaikovsky's gay lifestyle
Tchaikovsky is thought of as a gloomy fatalist, but a rarely staged humorous opera and a book about his gay lifestyle will make us think again
- Just Jack, Shepherd's Bush Empire, London (Rated 3/ 5 )
- Staff Benda Bilili, Barbican, London (Rated 4/ 5 )
- Pope to release album to spread the word
Don't miss...
The Week In Radio: When poetry becomes an adventure
If I had a fiver for everyone I've heard say, "I never watch any television apart from the news and David Attenborough", well, it would probably cover my licence fee. But while there being Nothing on TV has been a staple moan of British cultural life for some time now, radio is in far happier shape. The Rajar figures for the third quarter of the year were good for the BBC, especially Radios 3, 4 and 5 Live. There were all sorts of explanations, including the Ashes and the Proms and global economic meltdown to explain why people were reaching for the radio. Yet perhaps it comes down to the fact that radio simply does some things better.
The Kreutzer Sonata, Gate Theatre, London (Rated 4/ 5 )
The motion of a train loosens the tongue, confides Pozdnyshev, our companion in a railway carriage for the 85 minutes of this extraordinarily compelling stage adaptation of Tolstoy's great, warped novella The Kreutzer Sonata.
- Architecting, The Pit, Barbican, London (Rated 4/ 5 )
- First Night: Staff Benda Bilili, Barbican, London (Rated 4/ 5 )
- Uncle Vanya, Old Vic, Bristol (Rated 2/ 5 )
Angela Gheorghiu/Marius Manea/Philharmonia Orchestra, Royal Festival Hall (Rated 2/ 5 )
For anyone wondering what on earth the Overture to Leonard Bernstein's Candide was doing at the start of this bizarre, rag-bag of an evening (there seemed to be no rhyme or reason for its presence) might I suggest that the inference may have been that "in the best of all possible worlds" (to quote Voltaire) Angela Gheorghiu would have been singing more than two (yes, two) arias in the official programme with two more tired old chestnuts added as encores.
Latest videos
Shakespeare's MacBeth meets Africa in Botswana's first opera
Author Alexander McCall Smith has given Shakespeare's Macbeth an African twist blending wildlife and intrigue in Botswana's first ever opera, staged in a restored garage in the capital.
Steve Martin with The Steep Canyon Rangers, Royal Festival Hall, London
Rich pickings for comedy and bluegrass fans alike
Zaha Hadid's 'Stingray' roof makes waves
With its dazzling, undulating design and prominent positioning at the entrance to the Olympic Park, ministers hope that the London Aquatics Centre will be the architectural jewel in the capital's crown in 2012.
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Gift experiences for him, spa days for her, Christmas presents and stocking fillers for everyone!


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