Culture | November 17, 2017
Review: Glengarry Glen Ross
The salesman is a source of endless fascination for our American cousins. A quasi mythical figure in (...Read More)
The salesman is a source of endless fascination for our American cousins. A quasi mythical figure in (...Read More)
Northerners like me love to whinge about how London overshadows the rest of the country, but in cult (...Read More)
In this centenary year of the October Revolution, the Tate Modern has two Soviet art exhibitions (...Read More)
Marjorie whiles away her time chatting to her dead husband, Walter. He appears not as an old man but (...Read More)
Hot on the heels of Saint George and the Dragon, the National Theatre’s cack-handed allegory about (...Read More)
This exhibition isn’t so much a retrospective of two of Soviet Russia’s most important undergrou (...Read More)
Van Gogh’s paintings have long served as inspiration for animators. I’ve wandered through virtua (...Read More)
What a time to stage a proper state-of-the-nation play. With record inequality, rising nationalism a (...Read More)