biography
Extract: 'Til Death Us Do Part' - Dickens's first biographerSaturday, 22 October 2011![]() Over their lifelong friendship Dickens sometimes mocked Forster and quarrelled furiously with him, but he was the only man to whom he confided his most private experiences and feelings, and he never ceased to trust him and rely on him. It was not a... Read more... |
A Dish of Tea With Dr Johnson, Arts TheatreSaturday, 10 September 2011![]() It’s not every evening one is invited to take A Dish of Tea with Dr Johnson, and the 90 minutes spent in the company of England’s greatest wit and original lexicographer pass in a whirl of aphorisms and expostulations, with a fair smattering of... Read more... |
My Summer Reading: Tenor Ian BostridgeMonday, 22 August 2011![]() The career of acclaimed tenor Ian Bostridge (b 1964) has taken a somewhat unusual trajectory. He was reading for a PhD on witchcraft at Corpus Christi College, Oxford before he decided to turn his hobby of singing into his profession, despite not... Read more... |
Extract: Soul of the Man - Bobby 'Blue' BlandSunday, 14 August 2011![]() Bobby Bland had waited through three difficult years, recording for three different labels with no hits and not much to show for it. He had waited through more than two boring years in the Army with no more than an honorable discharge and a bus... Read more... |
Being Shakespeare, Trafalgar StudiosWednesday, 22 June 2011![]() There’s a lovely moment in A Midsummer Night’s Dream where Peter Quince assigns roles to his company of rude mechanicals. Unsatisfied with the part of the hero, Bottom interrupts, insisting he be allowed to play not only Pyramus but heroine Thisbe... Read more... |
DVD: Speer and Hitler: The Devil's ArchitectMonday, 06 June 2011![]() Albert Speer was Hitler’s most high-ranking war minister, but just how much was he complicit in Nazi atrocities? Thirty years after his death, and 16 after Gitta Sereny’s controversial biography, Albert Speer: His Battle with Truth, Speer remains a... Read more... |
Into Thy Hands, Wilton's Music HallSunday, 05 June 2011![]() “Where once was certainty is now only void.” The age of John Donne was also the age of Galileo, Milton, of Hobbes, Francis Bacon and, of course, the King James Bible, whose 400th anniversary we celebrate this year. At the intersection of politics,... Read more... |
Brontë, Tricycle TheatreWednesday, 06 April 2011![]() “Too fat, too miserable, too pinched” for love and life, the Brontë sisters famously made a kingdom out of their dingy rectory home in rural Yorkshire. Denied not just a room but an existence of their own, these three Victorian spinsters found... Read more... |
Lenny Henry, TouringMonday, 21 February 2011![]() It takes a certain something to make a roomful of white people get their funk on. I feel I have dispensation to make that ridiculous generalisation because Lenny Henry, famously born in Dudley to immigrant Jamaican parents, addresses the whiteness... Read more... |
Hattie, BBC FourThursday, 20 January 2011![]() The way the BBC keeps knocking out these little biopics about the lives of various household names (John Lennon, Gracie Fields, Margot Fonteyn etc), you'd think there was nothing simpler than to get inside the mind of some complex public figure,... Read more... |
Onassis, Novello TheatreWednesday, 13 October 2010![]() What's the Greek for "oy"? All the bouzouki dancing and retsina in the world wouldn't be enough to make a satisfying play out of Onassis, Martin Sherman's rewrite of his own Aristo, seen two years ago at Chichester with the same director (long-time... Read more... |
Celebrity Autobiography, Leicester Square TheatreMonday, 04 October 2010![]() Celebrity Autobiography, like most of the world’s best ideas, is simple yet inspired. Eugene Pack’s creation, developed with Dayle Reyfel, was first seen in Los Angeles three years ago, then in New York and other American cities, and was a sellout... Read more... |
