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Telegraph Arts
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Arts reviews, features and interviews from telegraph.co.uk
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Saturday's BBC iPlayer choices
By Mary Evans
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The week's BBC radio choices
By Gillian Reynolds
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50 years of West Side Story
Impossible rhythms, lack of money, a show full of 'hatefulness and ugliness'... the musical to end all musicals, which opened in britain in 1958, had a difficult birth. Here, the original cast give Horatia Harrod the inside story.
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The new corporate mercenaries
Justin Marozzi reviews War Plc by Stephen Armstrong
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Depending on pills and red wine
Susanna Yager reviews crime fiction
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Anne Hathaway: in pique condition
Anne Hathaway, the hottest young actress in Hollywood, is feeling a bit sore and tender - but it has little to do with the physically punishing action film in which she's currently appearing. Catherine Elsworth meets her mid domestic drama.
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Hospitality is a double-edged sword
Jane Shilling reviews The Spare Room by Helen Garner and Towards Another Summer by Janet Frame
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Thomas More and his daughter
Helen Castor reviews A Daughter's Love: Thomas and Margaret More by John Guy
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Love, anarchy and music
Lucy Beresford reviews Illuminations by Eva Hoffman
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Literary Life
Mark Sanderson at large in a world of books
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The powerful fantasy of race
William Leith reviews Strange Fruit: Why Both Sides Are Wrong in the Race Debate by Kenan Malik
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Paperback choice
The Wild Places; Rudolf Nureyev; Three Victories and a Defeat; Bambi vs. Godzilla; The Outcast; Winnie and Wolf .
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Who Said What
Our regular review of the reviews
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A Victorian sleuth with a double life
Holly Kyte reviews The Widow's Secret by Brian Thompson
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How The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea got its name
Gary Dexter investigates 'The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea' by Yukio Mishima
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The Forsaken: Americans in Stalin's gulags
Noel Malcolm reviews The Forsaken by Tim Tzouliadis
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Why Sa Dingding has China in her hand
The eccentric costumes, ethereal beauty and haunting music of Sa Dingding have already made her China's biggest pop star. Now she's set to take Britain by storm. The precociously talented Mongolian talks to Sue Steward about zithers, pompoms and pigs.
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Brideshead Revisited 'will upset purists' with gay kiss
The relationship between Sebastian Flyte and Charles Ryder has been the subject of intense speculation ever since the fateful day they met at Oxford University.
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William Cecil had all the secrets
Marcus Nevitt reviews Burghley: William Cecil at the Court of Elizabeth I by Stephen Alford
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The prospect of salsa lessons
Chloe Rhodes reviews chick lit
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From psoriasis to sex mania
Michael Bywater reviews Sunbathing Naked and Other Miracle Cures by Guy Kennaway
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Fighting talk
Kasia Boddy reviews A Fighter's Heart by Sam Sheridan
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Torn from the maiden aunts
Amanda Craig reviews Consolation: a Novel of Mystery by James Wilson
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Raising the Dead: the men who created Frankenstein
Roger Lewis reviews Raising the Dead by Andy Dougan
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Endpaper: Kafka's leftovers
The nightmarish story of Max Brod's legacy has a good few twists to go, says Alex Clark
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Where did the Swedish future go?
Sukhdev Sandhu reviews Fishing in Utopia by Andrew Brown
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Jeremy Lewis, literary maverick
Duncan Fallowell reviews Grub Street Irregular by Jeremy Lewis
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Katherine Mansfield signs off
Christopher Hawtree reviews The Collected Letters of Katherine Mansfield: Volume Five
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Befriending John Julius Norwich
John de Falbe reviews Trying to Please by John Julius Norwich
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Richard Nixon taught America to hate
Dominic Sandbrook reviews Nixonland by Rick Perlstein
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Losing the war against Islamic extremism
Sameer Rahim reviews Descent into Chaos by Ahmed Rashid
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Friday's BBC iPlayer choices
By Patricia Wynn Davies
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The week's BBC radio choices
By Gillian Reynolds
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The weekend's television choices
By Robert Collins, Mary Evans, Simon Horsford & Matt Warman
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Critic's choice - BBC Proms 2008: The First Night of the Proms Live (BBC2)
By Patricia Wynn Davies
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Unravelling the mysteries of the Koran
Do you agree with Stephen Pile's view of the week's TV? Have your say in his online forum.
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Burn Up: Oil on troubled waters
BBC2?s Burn Up wants to buttonhole us about climate change. But will anyone listen? Michael Deacon talks to Rupert Penry-Jones and writer Simon Beaufoy
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The Wire
As the new series of The Wire begins, co-creator David Simon tells Andrew Pettie about nearly getting cancelled and the state of modern journalism
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Indigestible truths about food supply
Paul Levy reviews The End of Food by Paul Roberts and Hungry City by Carolyn Steel
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Pick of the paperbacks
The Discovery of France; A Thing of Unspeakable Horror; Peeling the Onion; The Solitude of Emperors; Rape; Delirium; The Ghost.
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