Are Born Again Christians Allowed to Go to Concerts

  • In from the cold: indigenous Sámi artists debut at the Venice Biennale

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

    Sami artists debut Venice Biennale
  • The Corn is Green, review: Nicola Walker is unmissable in this riveting production

    The National Theatre's revival of Emlyn Williams's 1938 play is crowned by the Unforgotten star's finely calibrated performance

  • The Palace Papers exposes royal stories The Crown writers tin just dream of – from Andrew to Megxit

    Did Prince Harry really consult MI6 about a therapist? Tina Chocolate-brown picks upward where The Diana Chronicles left off in a gripping insider account

  • Distressing, Oscar-hungry auteurs – the Netflix 'passion project' political party is over

    The streaming behemothic'south plummeting subscriber numbers tin can merely mean one thing for cinema: more films like The Adam Projection, and no more Romas

  • Are 'Blackness Out' performances really the reply to British theatre'due south race trouble?

    'Black Out' performances of racially-charged shows for all-black audiences can be empowering and unifying. Just does it risk segregation?

Comment and analysis

  • Victoria Coren Mitchell in Brain Reaction
  • Sad, Oscar-hungry auteurs – the Netflix 'passion project' party is over

    The streaming giant'southward plummeting subscriber numbers can only mean one thing for cinema: more films like The Adam Project, and no more Romas

    Zoe Saldana and Ryan Reynolds in The Adam Project
  • Put your claws away, theatregoers – and give Jodie Comer a break

    The Killing Eve star's West Finish debut seems to be a hit with fans. Simply the transition from screen to stage doesn't ever go smoothly

    Jodie Comer in rehearsals for Suzie Miller's play Prima Facie
  • Who would dare write a rom-com in today's climate?

    Many classic cinematic romances would not withstand the scrutiny of today's thought police. No wonder and then many contempo offerings are anodyne

    Richard Gere and Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman, 1990

Reviews

  • Is at that place annihilation Zadie Smith tin't exercise?

    The writer showed she can sing beautifully, alongside all her other talents, in a Barbican performance with the BBC Symphony Orchestra

    Cultural polymath: Zadie Smith
  • The Palace Papers exposes majestic stories The Crown writers tin only dream of – from Andrew to Megxit

    Did Prince Harry actually consult MI6 about a therapist? Tina Brown picks upward where The Diana Chronicles left off in a gripping insider account

    'The snottiest man I've ever heard in my life': the Duke and Duchess of Sussex on their wedding day in 2018
  • The Corn is Green, review: Nicola Walker is unmissable in this riveting production

    The National Theatre'southward revival of Emlyn Williams's 1938 play is crowned by the Unforgotten star'south finely calibrated performance

    Dogged and dutiful: Miss Moffat (Nicola Walker)
  • Marys Seacole: a challenging, fourth dimension-bending introduction to the other Florence Nightingale

    This frustrating, compelling drama at the Donmar boasts a fantastic lead performance past Kayla Meikle as a nurse who heads to the Crimean War

    Kayla Meikle as Mary Seacole in Marys Seacole, at the Donmar
  • Punchdrunk: The Burnt Urban center, review: not quite a theatrical Trojan equus caballus

    This major new work by the immersive pioneers has some good ideas, but lacks the surprise of their greatest piece of work

    Inventive twists and turns: Punchdrunk performer Yilin Kong
  • At the Venice Biennale, surreal joys are in, Putin is out – and the stale males are hanging on

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

    In the Giardini is a temporary Ukrainian 'piazza'

Behind the music

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

This evening'due south TV

  • What'south on TV tonight: Snooker Earth Championship, Killing Eve, Britain's Got Talent and more

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

Screen Secrets

A regular series telling the stories behind picture and Goggle box's greatest hits – and most fascinating flops

  • Is at that place annihilation Zadie Smith can't practise?

    The writer showed she tin sing beautifully, alongside all her other talents, in a Barbican performance with the BBC Symphony Orchestra

    Cultural polymath: Zadie Smith
  • The Palace Papers exposes royal stories The Crown writers tin can only dream of – from Andrew to Megxit

    Did Prince Harry really consult MI6 about a therapist? Tina Brown picks up where The Diana Chronicles left off in a gripping insider account

    'The snottiest man I've ever heard in my life': the Duke and Duchess of Sussex on their wedding day in 2018
  • Read an exclusive new Marilyn Monroe short story by Joyce Ballad Oates

    The writer of the Pulitzer-winning Blonde, soon to be a Hollywood biopic, has written a new horror story – narrated by a Marilyn sexual practice doll

    Marilyn Monroe Blonde Joyce Carol Oates
  • Roar writer Cecelia Ahern on why her stories aren't trying to outset a gender war

    Ahern'due south stories, adapted for Apple TV+, include one about women refusing a man a vasectomy. But, she says, her work isn't out to arraign men

    Betty Gilpin in the story The Woman Who Was Kept On A Shelf
  • In from the cold: indigenous Sámi artists debut at the Venice Biennale

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

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

    The 59th edition of the art extravaganza 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'southward first ever pavilion at the Venice Biennale plunges you into the eccentric world of Sergey Kalmykov

    Dreamer: Sergey Kalmykov
  • Sonia Boyce, British Pavilion, Venice, review: lacks the X-factor of 18-carat imaginative strangeness

    The British artist's Venice testify Feeling Her Fashion is gentle and tasteful, with an underlying current of social critique, but information technology doesn't soar

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

In depth

More stories

  • Is there annihilation Zadie Smith can't do?

    The author showed she can sing beautifully, alongside all her other talents, in a Barbican functioning with the BBC Symphony Orchestra

    Cultural polymath: Zadie Smith
  • 'It's possible she was assassinated': Joyce Ballad Oates on Marilyn Monroe

    As her novel Blonde gets the Hollywood treatment, Oates unmasks the real Monroe

    'Marilyn Monroe was a performance – by a woman called Norma Jeane Baker': the actress in 1946
  • Victoria Coren Mitchell in Brain Reaction
  • The Palace Papers exposes imperial stories The Crown writers can only dream of – from Andrew to Megxit

    Did Prince Harry actually consult MI6 near a therapist? Tina Brownish picks upwardly where The Diana Chronicles left off in a gripping insider account

    'The snottiest man I've ever heard in my life': the Duke and Duchess of Sussex on their wedding day in 2018
  • The Corn is Light-green, review: Nicola Walker is unmissable in this riveting production

    The National Theatre's revival of Emlyn Williams'south 1938 play is crowned past the Unforgotten star'southward finely calibrated performance

    Dogged and dutiful: Miss Moffat (Nicola Walker)
  • In from the cold: indigenous Sámi artists debut at the Venice Biennale

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

    Sami artists debut Venice Biennale
  • Sad, Oscar-hungry auteurs – the Netflix 'passion project' party is over

    The streaming giant's plummeting subscriber numbers can only mean i thing for picture palace: more films similar The Adam Project, and no more Romas

    Zoe Saldana and Ryan Reynolds in The Adam Project
  • Are 'Black Out' performances really the respond to British theatre'due south race problem?

    'Blackness Out' performances of racially-charged shows for all-black audiences tin exist empowering and unifying. Only does it hazard segregation?

    Terique Jarrett and Sharlene Whyte in the Almeida's new Daddy

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

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