David Lister
A founder member of The Independent David Lister joined the paper in 1986 as Assistant Home Editor. He became the paper's arts correspondent in 1988 and is now Arts Editor and writes a column each Saturday. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.
David Lister: They should put the Bard on the box
Political leaders tend not to speak about the arts. I'm not sure why. Perhaps they fear it looks a little "soft" or peripheral to the "big issues". Whatever the reason, they certainly give the subject a wide berth. We've been bombarded with Barack Obama's collected speeches and philosophy, but I defy anyone to give me chapter and verse on his cultural policy. I'm not sure that I know where Gordon Brown stands on cultural issues either.
Recently by David Lister
David Lister: Stardom is waiting in the wings
Saturday, 22 November 2008
The most heartwarming arts story of the week was the case of the man who phoned up the Welsh National Opera for a ticket and ended up singing the star role. "You're a tenor aren't you?" said the bloke at the box office, vaguely remembering the name of the ticket buyer, who was a music student in his spare time. "I don't suppose you're free tonight? We've got a bit of a problem..."
David Lister: Who cares about yesterday's men?
Saturday, 15 November 2008
Journalists never fare very well with David Hare. The playwright once wrote that "The Independent is staffed by fools who know nothing about art". That was this paper consigned to the cultural dustbin. And in his latest play, the profession as a whole gets short shrift. The token journalist is, as our critic put it, a "slimeball" who sleeps with the home secretary's daughter, when she is only 16.
David Lister: Could O2 stop spoiling my rock gigs?
Saturday, 8 November 2008
I have a bleak vision of becoming the man in the Bateman cartoon next time I go to a rock concert. I'll be ostracised, unable to get a drink, fighting for even the cheapest ticket, and everyone pointing at me in horrified amazement. And all because I do not subscribe to the O2 mobile phone network.
David Lister: Put a stop to this booking fee rip-off
Saturday, 1 November 2008
When the new home in Manchester for Royal Opera House productions was announced this week, there was one aspect that not a single reporter or commentator mentioned. And I'm quite sure that the two guiding spirits behind the scheme, ROH chief executive Tony Hall and Culture Secretary Andy Burnham, never once mentioned it. It is the old saw of booking fees.
David Lister: The Lowry Centre is right to be worried
Tuesday, 28 October 2008
To understand the new "Opera House of the North", look to the arts world's most important northerner. The present Secretary of State for Culture, Andy Burnham, has told me that he believes his own department is too "London-centric", that the arts world can be "patronising to the provinces" and that our national institutions, not least the Royal Opera House, need to start showing their wares outside of the capital.
David Lister: A kiss is just a kiss – even for starlets
Saturday, 25 October 2008
The best story I heard this week was told by Penelope Cruz at the London Film Festival premiere of Woody Allen's latest, Vicky Cristina Barcelona. In the movie, Cruz and Scarlett Johansson share a kiss.
David Lister: Nice festival. Shame about the city
Saturday, 18 October 2008
The London Film Festival started well this week. Frost/Nixon was a first-rate film to open with, showcasing as it does one of our finest actors, Michael Sheen. The gala opening in Leicester Square was followed by a suitably glamorous party in the ballroom of the Hilton Hotel. It was only when I stepped out of the Hilton to go home that I felt something wasn't quite right.
David Lister: Sorry, but comedy can be offensive
Saturday, 11 October 2008
Harry Enfield is in a spot of bother with the government of the Philippines over a sketch in his Harry and Paul show. In that sketch, Harry tried to mate his pet Geordie, played by Paul Whitehouse, with a Filipina maid.
David Lister: The Mobos are past their sell-by date
Saturday, 4 October 2008
Awards ceremonies come and go in the arts, pretty much on a weekly basis. But none can rank with the Mobos. What other awards can manage to be both ludicrous and dangerously divisive at the same time?
David Lister: The stage is set for new audiences
Saturday, 27 September 2008
The other day I stood in the ladies' lavatory of a West End theatre with Sir Cameron Mackintosh, and admired his handiwork. Sir Cameron has been lovingly restoring the theatres he owns, the most recent being the Wyndham's, and increasing the number of ladies' loos has been a priority. He has also smartened them up. I will be demanding equal rights for the Gents.

- Jack Riley: A word from the Redditor-in-chief
- Larry Ryan: 'Bizarre indie cameos'
- Simon Rice: The year of the (football) crisis
- Sanjida O'Connell: The truth about life in a 'green' house
- Jimmy Leach: Obama and the internet
- Archie Bland: Pick of the commentators
- Chris Schuler: Life on Mars
- Catherine Gordon: The boxer rebellion bands and some casual Johnny Borell hating
- Andrew Grice: Brown tries to defuse VAT bombshell
- Catherine Townsend: Google Sex Searches NSFW
- Jane Merrick: Peace reigns in the Labour Party
- David Price: Mapping the mind of the blogosphere
- Colinb: Trillion pound black hole of national debt?
- Edward Seckerson: Villazon Back in Comfort Zone
- The Life Browser: Scrooge Williams and friends
- The Independent starts blogging
- Start your own Independent Minds blog
Columnist Comments
• Deborah Orr: One more inquiry isn't going to help
I don't believe a public inquiry into the Baby P case is necessary
• Hamish McRae: It will take time, but we'll recover
If officialdom seems over-optimistic in its forecasts, the markets seem too pessimistic
• Janet Street-Porter: Mother does not always know best
One of the most sensitive subjects for writers is the mother-daughter relationship
• Mark Steel: Never mind the baby, just get back to work
The next thing will be an exciting new scheme known as the 'workhouse'
Most popular in Opinion
Read
1 Hamish McRae: It will take time, but we'll recover
2 Mark Steel: Never mind the baby, just get back to work
3 Janet Street-Porter: Mother does not always know best
4 Basildon Peta: It should be the tipping point for the tyrant – but this is Zimbabwe
5 Michael Gove: We need a Swedish education system
6 Deborah Orr: One more inquiry isn't going to help
8 Leading article: A military challenge to Mr Mugabe
9 Robert Fisk's World: The British should not forget the massive debt they owe the Irish
10 Leading article: Now is the time to tackle the abuses of our welfare system
Emailed
Commented
1 Mark Steel: Never mind the baby, just get back to work
2 Michael Gove: We need a Swedish education system
3 Hamish McRae: It will take time, but we'll recover
4 Janet Street-Porter: Mother does not always know best
5 Dominic Lawson: When 'life' should mean life.
6 Dylan Jones: The vibrancy of Hong Kong is extraordinary
7 James Purnell: New Labour is not dead and buried – it's in rude health
8 Basildon Peta: It should be the tipping point for the tyrant – but this is Zimbabwe



