Carlos and Sandra Cervantes Theatre for the Arts Riverside Academy
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Pamela Anderson razzle dazzles 'em in Chicago on Broadway
The 'Baywatch' star'south musical skills are a piece of work in progress, but her acting is surprisingly good and she'due south certainly pulling the crowds
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Noughts + Crosses, series 2, review: a drama designed to provoke classroom contend
This fast-paced adaptation of Malorie Blackman's novels will go young people thinking, just the plots are muddled and the dialogue is wooden
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Great britain's civilised tolerance of Second Globe War conscientious objectors should brand u.s. all proud
Tobias Kelly'southward book Battles of Conscience reminds us that Britain was almost alone in enshrining in law the right to refuse military duty
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Barry Humphries live: the irreverent old sorcerer of Oz remains a wonder, possums
This 'audience with' isn't the revelation is promises to be, but an evening with the man backside Dame Edna Everage is still not to exist missed
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Maud Martha review: an American archetype finally lands in the Great britain – vii decades late
Finally out in the U.k., Gwendolyn Brooks'southward 1953 novel follows a woman whose pare colour becomes a wall between herself and her lover
Comment and analysis
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How Orwell'south stab at socialist propaganda ended upwards as an assail on 'the stupid cult of Russia'
First published in 1937, The Route to Wigan Pier is a masterpiece – so why did many leftists hate it?
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Distressing, Oscar-hungry auteurs – the Netflix 'passion project' political party is over
The streaming giant's plummeting subscriber numbers can simply hateful one thing for picture palace: more films similar The Adam Project, and no more Romas
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Put your claws away, theatregoers – and requite Jodie Comer a intermission
The Killing Eve star's Westward Terminate debut seems to be a hit with fans. Merely the transition from screen to phase doesn't e'er go smoothly
Reviews
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Pamela Anderson razzle dazzles 'em in Chicago on Broadway
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Alexei Navalny: a riveting spectacle of Putin'due south arch enemy solving his own attempted murder
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Barry Humphries live: the irreverent old magician of Oz remains a wonder, possums
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Maud Martha review: an American classic finally lands in the UK – seven decades late
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The Tate's Walter Sickert show is a foggy panorama of Victorian clay and vice
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Britain's civilised tolerance of Second Globe State of war conscientious objectors should make us all proud
Behind the music
Rock's untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time
Tonight's Telly
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What'southward on TV this evening: Man City v Existent Madrid, Noughts + Crosses and more
Your consummate guide to the week's television set, films and sport, beyond terrestrial and digital platforms
Screen Secrets
A regular series telling the stories behind film and TV's greatest hits – and almost fascinating flops
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Noughts + Crosses, serial ii, review: a drama designed to provoke classroom debate
This fast-paced adaptation of Malorie Blackman's novels will become young people thinking, only the plots are muddled and the dialogue is wooden
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Noughts + Crosses, series two, review: a drama designed to provoke classroom debate
This fast-paced adaptation of Malorie Blackman's novels will become young people thinking, but the plots are muddled and the dialogue is wooden
-
Maud Martha review: an American classic finally lands in the United kingdom – seven decades late
Finally out in the Uk, Gwendolyn Brooks's 1953 novel follows a woman whose pare colour becomes a wall between herself and her lover
-
From chinoiserie to Fu Manchu: how Britain's Oriental romance turned sour
Poet Hannah Lowe scooped this year's Costa Prize for The Kids. In two new books, she tries to solve the riddle of her Chinese ancestry
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Britain's civilised tolerance of Second World State of war conscientious objectors should make us all proud
Tobias Kelly'south book Battles of Conscience reminds us that Britain was nearly alone in enshrining in law the right to refuse military duty
-
The Tate's Walter Sickert show is a foggy panorama of Victorian dirt and vice
Tate U.k.'south exhibition is saturated with too many similar paintings and misses an opportunity to explore Sickert'southward interim
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In from the common cold: indigenous Sámi artists debut at the Venice Biennale
The native people of the Arctic Circle are highlighting their controversial past from this weekend
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At the Venice Biennale, surreal joys are in, Putin is out – and the stale males are hanging on
The 59th edition of the fine art caricature pays tribute to Ukrainian heroism while delving brilliantly into the weirder corners of our minds
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The Van Gogh of Kazakhstan who feigned insanity to escape the Soviets
The country's first ever pavilion at the Venice Biennale plunges you into the eccentric world of Sergey Kalmykov
In depth
More stories
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Noughts + Crosses, serial ii, review: a drama designed to provoke classroom debate
This fast-paced accommodation of Malorie Blackman'due south novels volition become young people thinking, but the plots are muddled and the dialogue is wooden
-
Pamela Anderson razzle dazzles 'em in Chicago on Broadway
The 'Baywatch' star's musical skills are a piece of work in progress, simply her interim is surprisingly good and she's certainly pulling the crowds
-
Barry Humphries live: the irreverent old wizard of Oz remains a wonder, possums
This 'audience with' isn't the revelation is promises to be, simply an evening with the human behind Dame Edna Everage is yet not to be missed
-
Obituary: Violet Crawley, the Dowager Countess of Grantham
A champion of great British morals and aristocratic hauteur who presided over Downton Abbey – both Boob tube drama and stately domicile
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Maud Martha review: an American classic finally lands in the U.k. – seven decades late
Finally out in the Great britain, Gwendolyn Brooks's 1953 novel follows a adult female whose peel colour becomes a wall between herself and her lover
-
From chinoiserie to Fu Manchu: how Uk'south Oriental romance turned sour
Poet Hannah Lowe scooped this year's Costa Prize for The Kids. In two new books, she tries to solve the riddle of her Chinese ancestry
-
The Tate's Walter Sickert show is a foggy panorama of Victorian dirt and vice
Tate Britain's exhibition is saturated with too many similar paintings and misses an opportunity to explore Sickert's acting
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Proms 2022: everything you demand to know
With concerts costless of Covid restrictions at long concluding, our classical music critic looks alee to the highlights of this twelvemonth'due south festival
Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/
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