4842 results
The Importance of Being Earnest review
This was a suitably light-hearted production of perhaps the perfect play for a June evening in a ...
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Review | theatre
Simon Amstell + Arnab Chanda review
Simon Amstell! Stop Googling yourself! With his show opening to the sound of young girls squealing ...
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Review | theatre
Dad's Army review
Whilst it is a cliché to say so about film adaptations of television comedies, there was a time ...
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Review | theatre
The Last South: Pursuit of the Pole review
Presented by James Seabright, written by G.M. Calhoun and directed by Rob Mulholland, The Last ...
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Review | theatre
Sinatra review
‘Sinatra’ uses rare archive film of ol’ blue eyes projected onto contemporary screens such as ...
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Review | theatre
Sunday Times Oxford Literary Festival 2008 review - Louis de Bernieres and Traveller's TalesOxford Literary Festival, Saturday 5th & Sunday 6th April 2008
The 12th Oxford Literary Festival brought some 250 writers to Oxford for a week of talks and ...
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Review | festivals
Everything You Ever Wanted To Know about Sheep But Were Afraid To Ask review
Easter time in the UK means lambs, and that means cute, bleating beasties gambolling across the ...
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Review | uncategorised
Volpone review
Ok, I confess it. I know nothing about Ben Jonson. The scope of my literary knowledge of that era ...
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Review | theatre
Happy-Go-Lucky review - Eddie Marsan – Happy-Go-Lucky’s not so happy driving instructor – is perhaps Britain’s most consistently impressive character actor. Hardly a household name, he’s popped up in blockbusters (like Miami Vice, Mission Impossible 3 and Gangs of New York) and indies too (21 Grams, Pierrepoint, Sixty Six). He even started out in Oxford, doing garden-play Shakespeare. Glenn Watson chats to Britain’s best kept secret…
You’re not a celebrity but you get pretty much rave reviews for your performances. How do you ...
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Review | cinema
Interviews with the stars! review - Eddie Marsan – Happy-Go-Lucky’s not so happy driving instructor – is perhaps Britain’s most consistently impressive character actor. Hardly a household name, he’s popped up in blockbusters (like Miami Vice, Mission Impossible 3 and Gangs of New York) and indies too (21 Grams, Pierrepoint, Sixty Six). He even started out in Oxford, doing garden-play Shakespeare. Glenn Watson chats to Britain’s best kept secret…
You’re not a celebrity but you get pretty much rave reviews for your performances. How do you ...
More info
Review | cinema
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