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Did Tommy Kill His Mom

  • Tammy Faye, review: Elton John's new musical about a famous The states televangelist is past-the-numbers

    It isn't a hell of a show, more surprisingly purgatorial at too many points, struggling to find a strong dramatic pulse

    Andrew Rannells and Katie Brayben in Tammy Faye, at the Almeida
  • Doc Martin'south finale was an irresistible hour of mild peril – and one big decision

    During its 18 years on air, Martin Clunes's Doc has proven Television needn't be all murder and doom and gloom – will the bigwigs take annotation?

  • The Repair Store: A Majestic Visit, review: the King'south visit to the barn was perfect feelgood TV

    Watching the team restore such treasures every bit an 18th-century clock and a Victorian vase, personally selected past the King, was a please

  • How white noise took over the music industry – and put musicians out of pocket

    Songs made upwardly of ambient noise have exploded on YouTube and Spotify, with creators making a killing. But where does this leave real music?

  • Motility over, Comic Con – the Cats cosplayers are here

    The U.k.'due south inaugural Musical Con gave thousands of theatre fans a safe space to sing, dance and wear furry unitards

Comment and analysis

  • How Goggle box has abandoned true culture

    Showing acts of cultural vandalism on Aqueduct iv's Jimmy Carr Destroys Art legitimises the mob mentality that has hijacked the arts

    Jimmy Carr presided over a debate on whether art should be separated from the artist on Channel 4
  • Radio 4'southward Feedback has lost its seize with teeth without Roger Bolton

    Again, the BBC'south pandering to younger viewers rather than its middle-anile core demographic is a misguided arroyo

    Andrea Catherwood
  • The best female film-maker in 1950s Hollywood was an Englishwoman. How did nosotros forget her?

    Ida Lupino's The Hitch-Hiker (1953) was the starting time American film noir directed by a adult female – and a towering cinematic accomplishment

    Actress turned director Ida Lupino on the deck of a sailing boat c. 1950
  • Tony Adams and Katya Jones on Strictly Come Dancing

Reviews

  • The Waste State by Matthew Hollis review: how TS Eliot wrote his masterpiece

    Faber poetry editor Matthew Hollis's 'biography of a poem' captures the whirl of literary life in the 1920s – despite some strange omissions

    'Two halves of a combining mind': Ezra Pound (left) and TS Eliot
  • Barbarian, review: an Airbnb booking has never been and then terrifying

    Georgina Campbell and Bill Skarsgård star in this craftily-structured and frighteningly tense horror-thriller out in time for Halloween

    Georgina Campbell's Tess discovers it's not a good idea to stay in creepy rentals
  • The Adept Nurse: Eddie Redmayne excels as the killer who stalked hospital wards

    In this dramatisation of the existent-life case of Charles Cullen, Redmayne and Jessica Chastain weave a magnificently tense spell

    Eddie Redmayne and Jessica Chastain in The Good Nurse
  • Rina Sawayama, pop'south newest chameleon, line-dances her fashion to the meridian

    This was a high-energy set from the young British-Japanese star, and if its sentiments were sometimes drippy, its exuberance was wonderful

    Rina Sawayama's Hold the Girl tour is now moving overseas
  • Tammy Faye, review: Elton John's new musical about a famous US televangelist is by-the-numbers

    Information technology isn't a hell of a show, more than surprisingly purgatorial at too many points, struggling to notice a potent dramatic pulse

    Andrew Rannells and Katie Brayben in Tammy Faye, at the Almeida
  • How 4th-century Christianity radically reinvented itself from a marginal sect to a world power

    In his new volume Christendom, Peter Heather charts the rise of 'a small near Eastern mystery cult' into a world-straddling institution

    The Crucifixion by Giotto (c1305)

Behind the music

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

Tonight's Television receiver

  • What'south on TV this evening: The Love Box in Your Living Room; Inside the Tower of London; and more

    Your complete guide to the week's tv, films and sport, beyond terrestrial and digital platforms

Screen Secrets

A regular serial telling the stories behind pic and Boob tube's greatest hits – and most fascinating flops

  • The Waste Country by Matthew Hollis review: how TS Eliot wrote his masterpiece

    Faber poetry editor Matthew Hollis'southward 'biography of a verse form' captures the whirl of literary life in the 1920s – despite some strange omissions

    'Two halves of a combining mind': Ezra Pound (left) and TS Eliot
  • How 4th-century Christianity radically reinvented itself from a marginal sect to a globe ability

    In his new book Christendom, Peter Heather charts the ascension of 'a pocket-sized nigh Eastern mystery cult' into a globe-straddling institution

    The Crucifixion by Giotto (c1305)
  • Alcoholic jihadi hunters and TV stars in the bath – confessions of a ghostwriter

    Often seen as the publishing world's 'dirty footling secret', an bearding writer reveals what the industry is really like

    Ewan McGregor in The Ghost Writer
  • Is Female parent Expressionless by Vigdis Hjorth review: a thrilling novel virtually child-parent obsession

    A mother goes missing in this uncanny Norwegian fable, which reminds united states of america that every child will endeavor and neglect to know, truly, their ain female parent

    Vigdis Hjorth
  • How TV has abased true culture

    Showing acts of cultural vandalism on Channel four'due south Jimmy Carr Destroys Fine art legitimises the mob mentality that has hijacked the arts

    Jimmy Carr presided over a debate on whether art should be separated from the artist on Channel 4
  • Jimmy Carr Destroys Art, review: moronic, pathetic and a waste matter of our time

    No doubt the creators wanted to be 'provocative', but this was not in any meaningful way

    Jimmy Carr brandishing a hammer
  • The Horror Prove!, review: An intriguing trawl through the nightmares of youth culture

    Featuring art from Spitting Image to Siouxsie Sioux, this new Somerset Firm exhibition is equally fun, anarchic and disturbing as punk itself

    Return of the Repressed3 by Jake and Dinos Chapman
  • Foreign Clay: a garden of weird and wonderful delights at the Southbank

    With contributors ranging from household names to relative unknowns, the Hayward'south evidence of gimmicky ceramics is both smart and cracking fun

    Klara Kristalova's Camouflage

In depth

More than stories

  • The Love Box in Your Living Room, review: Harry Enfield'south bewildering BBC transport-upwardly veered close to genius

    Viewers not familiar with Adam Curtis's documentaries may take been slightly baffled past Enfield and Paul Whitehouse'south spoof

    Harry Enfield in The Love Box in Your Living Room
  • Is Kanye W finished?

    The talented, troubled rap mogul's anti-Semitic rants accept already price him dearly. How can his career recover?

    Kanye West in Paris, October 2022
  • The Waste Land past Matthew Hollis review: how TS Eliot wrote his masterpiece

    Faber verse editor Matthew Hollis'due south 'biography of a poem' captures the whirl of literary life in the 1920s – despite some strange omissions

    'Two halves of a combining mind': Ezra Pound (left) and TS Eliot
  • Barbarian, review: an Airbnb booking has never been and then terrifying

    Georgina Campbell and Neb Skarsgård star in this craftily-structured and frighteningly tense horror-thriller out in time for Halloween

    Georgina Campbell's Tess discovers it's not a good idea to stay in creepy rentals
  • The Skillful Nurse: Eddie Redmayne excels as the killer who stalked hospital wards

    In this dramatisation of the existent-life case of Charles Cullen, Redmayne and Jessica Chastain weave a magnificently tense spell

    Eddie Redmayne and Jessica Chastain in The Good Nurse
  • What billionaires actually get upwardly to on their superyachts

    Ruben Östlund'southward Triangle of Sadness sees a yacht go a floating hell – but how accurate is his depiction of the luxury cruise manufacture?

    Triangle of Sadness studies inequality, class and the peccadilloes of the super wealthy
  • Peter Capaldi: 'Every Medico Who gets backlash'

    The Thick Of It star on Scottish independence, why he's leaving Dr. Who behind, dealing with fans, and his rare circuit into horror

    'When I watched horror I think I saw something familiar – gore': Peter Capaldi stars in Amazon Prime Video's The Devil's Hour
  • Rina Sawayama, popular's newest chameleon, line-dances her way to the top

    This was a loftier-energy set from the immature British-Japanese star, and if its sentiments were sometimes drippy, its exuberance was wonderful

    Rina Sawayama's Hold the Girl tour is now moving overseas

Did Tommy Kill His Mom,

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

Posted by: mcintyrerowend.blogspot.com

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