Raphael Madonna and Child With the Young St John Art History

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  • Modern-day celebrities could acquire a thing or two from outrageous octogenarian Miriam Margolyes

    Margolyes opens upwards virtually her achievements and anxieties equally Alan Yentob's Imagine program reminds us of how lucky nosotros are to have her

  • 'In Russian federation, brutality is role of everyday life': meet Confront, the rapper exiled by Putin

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Comment and assay

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    The Killing Eve star's West Stop debut seems to be a hitting with fans. But the transition from screen to stage doesn't always go smoothly

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Reviews

  • Penelope Wilton and Maggie Smith in a scene from the new Downton film
  • Monica Bellucci played Maria Callas in a one-woman show
  • Renaud Capuçon shows us the futurity in Aix, plus the best of Apr's classical concerts

    The finale of the Easter Festival was a fittingly brilliant end to an consequence that showed classical music's young guns aslope seasoned pros

    Renaud Capucon and friends at the Grand Théâtre du Provence
  • 'He manages to brand me look like a blond Hitler': Alan Bennett's pandemic diaries reviewed

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  • Nick Mason'due south Saucerful of Secrets, review: glam-rock swagger and fierce experimentalism

    The Pinkish Floyd drummer and co dazzled the Royal Albert Hall with two hours of tempo-shifting nuttiness from the band's formative years

    'Watch out for some crowd-surfing': Nick Mason's Saucerful of Secrets
  • Ed Sheeran goes metal – just withal has the world as his choir

    The troubadour raised the roof at Dublin's Croke Park with every musical fashion imaginable. But his songcraft and charisma shone through

    Edtallica: Ed Sheeran rocks out at Croke Park

Behind the music

Rock'due south untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time

This night's Idiot box

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    Your complete guide to the calendar week's television, films and sport, across terrestrial and digital platforms

Screen Secrets

A regular series telling the stories behind film and TV'due south greatest hits – and near fascinating flops

  • 'He manages to brand me await like a blond Hitler': Alan Bennett's pandemic diaries reviewed

    At 86, the playwright was already effectively locked downwardly. His journal, House Arrest, is filled with elegiac memories and literary gossip

    National Treasure: playwright Alan Bennett
  • A cleaved-down bank clerk and a month in Margate – how TS Eliot wrote The Waste Land

    In 1921, Lloyds Bank sent TS Eliot to the seaside 'to exercise naught'. He tried – just accidentally wrote the poem of the century instead

    'On Margate Sands./ I can connect/ Nothing with nothing': Martin Parr's 1986 photograph of Margate seafront
  • What happens to pop stars after their xv minutes of fame – the ugly truth

    In his new book Exit Stage Left, Nick Duerden interviews dozens of in one case-famous musicians who plant themselves out of way

    So Solid Crew's Lisa Maffia, bottom left, now runs a hairdresser in Margate
  • 'I don't care what a agglomeration of 19-twelvemonth-old gender-studies students call up'

    So says the boss of Forum, a new publishing banner that's offering a home to 'cancelled' authors

    Publish and be damned: Sussex University protesters rallying against Kathleen Stock
  • In from the cold: ethnic Sámi artists debut at the Venice Biennale

    The native people of the Arctic Circle are highlighting their controversial past from this weekend

    Sami artists debut Venice Biennale
  • At the Venice Biennale, surreal joys are in, Putin is out – and the stale males are hanging on

    The 59th edition of the art caricature pays tribute to Ukrainian heroism while delving brilliantly into the weirder corners of our minds

    In the Giardini is a temporary Ukrainian 'piazza'
  • The Van Gogh of Kazakhstan who feigned insanity to escape the Soviets

    The country's get-go ever pavilion at the Venice Biennale plunges you into the eccentric earth of Sergey Kalmykov

    Dreamer: Sergey Kalmykov
  • Sonia Boyce, British Pavilion, Venice, review: lacks the X-factor of genuine imaginative strangeness

    The British artist's Venice evidence Feeling Her Manner is gentle and tasteful, with an underlying current of social critique, but it doesn't soar

    Room 3 in Sonia Boyce's 2022 British Pavilion featuring performers Jacqui Dankworth and Sofia Jernberg

In depth

More stories

  • Penelope Wilton and Maggie Smith in a scene from the new Downton film
  • Modern-day celebrities could learn a thing or two from outrageous octogenarian Miriam Margolyes

    Margolyes opens up about her achievements and anxieties as Alan Yentob's Imagine program reminds us of how lucky nosotros are to have her

    Miriam Margolyes
  • Bling Band: Hollywood Heist, review: trashy true law-breaking that glamourises the idiots who got caught

    Channel 4's reconstructions of a 2008-09 spree of glory robberies is eye-rolling, tummy-turning stuff

    Bling Ring gang member Nick Prugo
  • TalkTV review: Piers Morgan showed his showbiz course as he took on Donald Trump

    Star quality and shine product values ensured new channel was spared the launch day woes suffered by rival GB News

    Piers Morgan, Donald Trump
  • Peacock, review: gym sitcom skewers the hollow masculinity behind the pecs and the posers

    After The Curse, it'southward a render to familiar turf for the People But Exercise Nothing coiffure but with slightly diminishing returns

    Allan Mustafa in Peacock
  • 'In Russia, brutality is part of everyday life': encounter Face, the rapper exiled past Putin

    The political musician branded a 'foreign amanuensis' by the Kremlin describes how violence pervades Russian civilisation

    Ivan Dryomin is living in a secret country after his raps tearing into the Russian government got him blacklisted
  • Monica Bellucci played Maria Callas in a one-woman show
  • Renaud Capuçon shows us the futurity in Aix, plus the best of April's classical concerts

    The finale of the Easter Festival was a fittingly brilliant end to an event that showed classical music's immature guns alongside seasoned pros

    Renaud Capucon and friends at the Grand Théâtre du Provence

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Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/

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