|
|
|
|
News Feeds |
|
Telegraph Arts
|
Arts reviews, features and interviews from telegraph.co.uk
|
|
-
Monday's TV & radio choices
By Simon Horsford, Gerard O'Donovan and Gillian Reynolds
-
Titian: art's first superstar
Titian made painting fashionable, says his biographer Mark Hudson. That's one reason why Britain must buy his masterpiece.
-
A.N. Wilson: World of books
Letters reveal a legacy of gems, says A.N. Wilson.
-
On the road: La Machine, Horrid Henry: Live and Horrid!
Dominic Cavendish reviews shows from around the country, including La Machine at Liverpool and Horrid Henry: Live and Horrid! at Sheffield Lyceum.
-
BBC Proms 2008: good, evil and a glimpse of eternity
Geoffrey Norris reviews the London Philharmonic Orchestra under Vladimir Jurowski.
-
Bestival: mermaids, jellyfish and Neptunes dance in a sea of sounds and mud
Bernadette McNulty reviews Bestival at the Isle of Wight.
-
Antonio Pappano: the unstoppable maestro
The Royal Opera's music director Antonio Pappano says he has finally bonded with his orchestra. He talks to Rupert Christiansen.
-
Damien Hirst's new masterstroke fails to impress
Alastair Sooke reviews Beautiful Inside My Head Forever at Sotheby's, London W1.
-
Stars arrive at Toronto Film Festival
John Hiscock reports from the Toronto Film Festival.
-
The week's BBC radio choices
By Gillian Reynolds
-
Saturday's BBC iPlayer choices
By Patrick Smith
-
Sunday's BBC iPlayer choices
By Simon Horsford and Gerard O'Donovan
-
Damien Hirst's art 'absurd' and 'tacky', says critic Robert Hughes
Damien Hirst's works are "absurd" and "tacky commodities", according to Robert Hughes, a prominent Australian art critic.
-
Review: The Act of Love by Howard Jacobson
The desire to be cuckolded is neither interesting nor sexy, finds Stephen Abell.
-
Review: Chicago by Alaa Al Aswany
Sukhdev Sandhu sinks into a gripping, steamy and occasionally soapy novel from one of Egypts bestselling writers.
-
Review: The Act of Love by Howard Jacobson
Gerald Jacobs on a masterly novel of cuckoldry
-
Review: Chicago by Alaa Al Aswany
Ed King is impressed by this American-based follow-up to an Egyptian bestseller
-
50 reasons to love Britain
Enough about the credit crunch. Forget knife crime. Never mind our split-second summers. There may be some things still to like about our small island.
-
John Ward: 'If I could solve this, then I could grieve'
John Ward has spent £2m and made 100 trips to Kenya trying to track down the killers of his daughter, Julie. As he follows up a new lead - 20 years to the day since her charred body was found in a safari park - he tells the full story of the bungling and deceit that means her murderers are still at large. Andrew Alderson reports from the Masai Mara.
-
Virtual 9/11
Many New Yorkers are still traumatised by the events of seven years ago. Can a terrifying computer simulation succeed where therapy has failed? Philip Sherwell investigates.
-
Review: Elizabeth in the Garden by Trea Martyn
Jenny Uglow unearths a Tudor drama played out in flower-beds
-
Review: The House of Wittgenstein by Alexander Waugh
The pianist Paul Wittgenstein s the hero of this family saga, finds Noel Malcolm
-
Review: The Private Patient by P.D. James
P.?D. James's compassion transforms the traditional whodunit, says David Robson
-
Review: Fine Just the Way It Is by Annie Proulx
The veteran chronicler of life on the ranch puts her characters through the mill, observes Lucy Beresford
-
Review: Ghost Train to the Eastern Star by Paul Theroux
Jason Webster accompanies Paul Theroux on the tracks of The Great Railway Bazaar
-
Resenting multiculturalism
Susanna Yager reviews crime fiction
-
How 'Whatever' got its name
Gary Dexter investigates 'Whatever' by Michel Houellebecq
-
What to read when you're feeling...heartbroken
Bibliotherapy by Justine Picardie
-
Who Said What
Our regular review of the reviews
-
Literary Life
Mark Sanderson at large in a world of books
-
Paperback choice
The Whisperers; Spilling the Beans; The Few; Higher Than the Eagle Soars; Tokyo Year Zero; Hotel de Dream
-
Kathleen Turner: I'm scary. When I go quiet, run
From vampish sex symbol in 'Body Heat' to alcoholic arthritis sufferer to celebrated stage actress and finally enigmatic beauty? At 54, Kathleen Turner is ready to reveal her true self. Interview by Nigel Farndale.
-
Sarah Miles: Sex, spooks and Steven Spielberg
A-list lovers, a haunted house, a scandalous death?.?.?.?Sarah Miles tells Christopher Hastings why she is turning her colourful life into a show
-
Venice Film Festival: The Wrestler wins Golden Lion
Hollywood flick takes the best picture gong on the closing day of the 65th Venice Film Festival.
-
Venice Film Festival: Olmi honoured by lifetime achievement award
Italian director Ermanno Olmi picks up lifetime achievement award in Venice. By Suzi Dixon and agencies.
-
Wisdom and slapstick from Lee Evans
Dominic Cavendish reviews Lee Evans at the Trent FM Arena, Nottingham.
-
Review: Bedlam by Catharine Arnold
Ann Wroe on the story of the world's most famous mental hospital.
-
Endpaper: Great writers on Sarah Palin
Tim Martin on literature's big guns versus the huntin', shootin' veep-in-waiting.
-
An old lady eats a tragic sandwich
Sam Leith reviews comics
-
Review: A Strange, Eventful History by Michael Holroyd
The stories of Henry Irving, Ellen Terry and their children make for a compelling family saga, says Michael Arditti.
|
|
|