1950s
DVD: Foxfire - Confessions of a Girl GangTuesday, 29 October 2013![]() Directed by a Frenchmen, Foxfire adapts an American book to create a film with an archetypical stance and setting which could rank it alongside The Outsiders, Stand by Me or even Rebel Without a Cause. The problem is that despite depicting a... Read more... |
Tharaud, London Philharmonic Orchestra and Chorus, Nézet-Séguin, Royal Festival HallThursday, 24 October 2013![]() If ever there were a week for London to celebrate Poulenc in the lamentably under-commemorated 50th anniversary year of his death, this is it. Two major choral works and two fun concertos at last join the party. But if Figure Humaine and the... Read more... |
Preview: Arnold Wesker's RootsThursday, 19 September 2013![]() Arnold Wesker has a theory that plays require a certain DNA to endure. When thoughts turn to the 1950s and the revolution in British theatre which allowed ordinary working-class life up onto the stage, the name which always comes up is John Osborne... Read more... |
Prom 60: Billy Budd, Glyndebourne Festival Opera, DavisWednesday, 28 August 2013![]() You may well ask whether theartsdesk hasn’t already exhausted all there is to say about Glyndebourne’s most celebrated Britten production of recent years. I gave it a more cautious welcome than most on its first airing, troubled a little by the... Read more... |
Pipe Dream, Union TheatreSunday, 04 August 2013![]() Rodgers and Steinbeck: sound unlikely? Well, self-proclaimed “family show” man Hammerstein may have baulked at words like "whorehouse" when he created a play for music out of Steinbeck’s Cannery Row and Sweet Thursday. But by 1955 the R&H duo... Read more... |
Dial M for Murder 3DThursday, 25 July 2013![]() Newly restored versions of old films in cinemas are commonplace. This revival of Alfred Hitchcock’s Dial M for Murder is set apart due to it being in 3D, as it was originally intended to be seen. But unless you were able to catch it in the few... Read more... |
The Amen Corner, National TheatreFriday, 14 June 2013![]() Oh, how the mighty are fallen. Margaret Alexander (Marianne Jean-Baptiste) is a storefront pastor in Harlem who leads her flock with absolutist conviction. No drinking, no smoking - the way to the Lord is through abstinence and clean living, and she... Read more... |
Sweet Bird of Youth, Old Vic TheatreThursday, 13 June 2013![]() A town called St Cloud, a girl named Heavenly and a faded star who feels she’s living on the Moon: the imagery of Tennessee Williams’s drama is celestial, yet he puts his characters through hell. Amid the clamour of church bells and self-righteous... Read more... |
William Scott, Hepworth WakefieldFriday, 07 June 2013![]() It’s the centenary of the birth of William Scott, once considered to be in the pantheon of British postwar artists. But where’s the hoopla and fanfare? Like so many British painters who had their glory years in the Fifties – before the explosion of... Read more... |
PopulaireThursday, 30 May 2013![]() Writer-director Régis Roinsard's feature debut is a perky French rom-com which brings together the talented, easy-on-the-eye trio of Déborah François, Romain Duris and Bérénice Bejo. Set in the late 50s it contains oodles of delicious period detail... Read more... |
Words of Everest, ITVWednesday, 29 May 2013![]() In an average lifetime a human being sits in front of the television for around 29,035 hours. Why? Because it’s there. OK, so the precise statistic is a guess. The figure, like the answer, is more correctly associated with the great outdoors. George... Read more... |
Rock ‘n’ Roll Britannia, BBC FourSaturday, 18 May 2013![]() From being “a strange facsimile of the original” to generating the “first British record made by people who are 100 per cent convinced that they are doing the right thing”, Rock ‘n’ Roll Britannia breezily mapped the protracted birth of a British... Read more... |
