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Peer Reviewed Articles About What Was It Like to Be a Wife in the 70s

  • Jodie Whittaker'southward penultimate Doctor Who left us with one question: will she get the girl?

    Convoluted plotting and feeble monsters distract from the best Who storyline in ages: Yaz and the Doc's burgeoning romance.

    Yasmin Khan (Mandip Gill) and The Doctor (Jodie Whittaker) fight Sea Devils in the Doctor Who Easter special
  • The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe, review: a very British criminal offence story, superbly told

    ITV's new miniseries about how John Darwin faked his own death features superb character acting and nighttime comic relief

  • The German tycoons who got fat on the Nazi killing machine

    After reading David de Jong's Nazi Billonaires, y'all volition never again buy a Volkswagen, a Dr Oetker pizza or Allianz insurance without unease

  • Scandaltown, Mike Bartlett's mod-day Restoration comedy, feels like champagne gone flat

    It'due south a practiced premise: a boisterous satire on the lazy thinking backside the civilization wars. Only the panto-ish result feels belatedly to the party

  • Gunge and custard pies: what happened when ITV's Tiswas reunited on stage, twoscore years on

    Chris Tarrant, Emerge James and Spit the Dog came together at St George's, Bristol – and the audience regressed en masse to the 1970s

Comment and analysis

  • We list celebrated buildings – why don't we do the same for endangered British films?

    Gems of British movie theatre are going to exist lost unless nosotros get organised, preserve and restore them. Here'due south where conservators should outset...

    Soldiering on: Anton Walbrook and Deborah Kerr in Powell and Pressburger's 1943 The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, which was painstakingly restored in 2012, paid for by Martin Scorsese
  • The David Lynch rumours are growing past the solar day

    The lack of a Cannes proclamation hasn't stopped the whisper train – is the master of arthouse bizarrerie returning after 16 years?

    Is a new film from director David Lynch on the cards?
  • Jez Butterworth's bold, brilliant Jerusalem wouldn't be written today

    The 2009 play, which is beingness revived in the West End, feels at odds with theatre'south current demand to make us experience shame about nationhood

    An unlikely hero: Mark Rylance in Jerusalem
  • The thorny upshot of Margaret Thatcher'south rose rage

    Remembering the very best of Gardeners' Question Time as Radio 4 celebrates 75 years of its horticultural gem

    Margaret Thatcher

Reviews

  • The German tycoons who got fat on the Nazi killing machine

    After reading David de Jong's Nazi Billonaires, you volition never again buy a Volkswagen, a Dr Oetker pizza or Allianz insurance without unease

    Blood on his hands: German industrialist Friedrich Flick in the dock at Nuremberg, 1947
  • Scandaltown, Mike Bartlett's modern-day Restoration one-act, feels similar champagne gone flat

    It's a good premise: a boisterous satire on the lazy thinking behind the culture wars. But the panto-ish effect feels late to the party

    Rachael Stirling as Lady Climber and Thomas Josling as Tom Double-Budget in Mike Bartlett's new play Scandaltown
  • Forget everything you call up you know about pop

    Bob Stanley'due south brilliantly entertaining book The Nativity of Pop reveals how pop trends were fabricated, and how racism has skewed the narrative

    Elvis Presley became a figurehead for rock'n'roll, but he owed his sound to black artists
  • The Premonitions Bureau: how 1960s scientists tried to predict disasters through dreams

    Sam Knight'southward atmospheric volume investigates a forgotten branch of psychiatry which sought to harness the power of spookily prophetic visions

    Unforeseen? The aftermath of the Aberfan disaster in 1966
  • What's Xi Jinping really thinking? Enquire Kevin Rudd, ex-PM of Australia and fluent Mandarin speaker

    Drawing on lengthy meetings with China's leader, Kevin Rudd's new volume The Avoidable War? is one of the best primers on U.s.-China relations

    Xi Jinping, then Vice President, pictured with Kevin Rudd, Australia's Prime Minister, in June 2010 in Canberra
  • Dua Lipa stuns as usual – if only we could get to know the woman behind the sparkle

    The star wowed with her slick product and spectacular choreography. Simply a picayune more than personality would have given this show heart

    Dua Lipa finally performed the first night of her long-postponed British tour at Manchester Arena

Backside the music

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

This night'due south Tv

  • What's on TV tonight: The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe, Michael Ball: Showtime, Physician Who and more

    Your complete guide to the week'south television, films and sport, beyond terrestrial and digital platforms

Screen Secrets

A regular series telling the stories behind film and Idiot box'south greatest hits – and most fascinating flops

  • The Thief, His Married woman and the Canoe, review: a very British crime story, superbly told

    ITV'southward new miniseries nigh how John Darwin faked his own death features superb character acting and dark comic relief

    Eddie Marsan and Monica Dolan as John and Anne Darwin in The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe
  • The High german tycoons who got fat on the Nazi killing automobile

    Afterward reading David de Jong's Nazi Billonaires, you lot volition never once again buy a Volkswagen, a Dr Oetker pizza or Allianz insurance without unease

    Blood on his hands: German industrialist Friedrich Flick in the dock at Nuremberg, 1947
  • Forget everything you think you know about pop

    Bob Stanley's brilliantly entertaining book The Birth of Pop reveals how pop trends were made, and how racism has skewed the narrative

    Elvis Presley became a figurehead for rock'n'roll, but he owed his sound to black artists
  • The Premonitions Bureau: how 1960s scientists tried to predict disasters through dreams

    Sam Knight's atmospheric book investigates a forgotten branch of psychiatry which sought to harness the ability of spookily prophetic visions

    Unforeseen? The aftermath of the Aberfan disaster in 1966
  • What's Xi Jinping really thinking? Ask Kevin Rudd, ex-PM of Australia and fluent Mandarin speaker

    Cartoon on lengthy meetings with Mainland china's leader, Kevin Rudd's new book The Avoidable War? is i of the best primers on Us-China relations

    Xi Jinping, then Vice President, pictured with Kevin Rudd, Australia's Prime Minister, in June 2010 in Canberra
  • 'You know that your own work will outlast you': the stonemasons saving Salisbury Cathedral

    As the building's 800th anniversary nears, we meet the team responsible for its ongoing survival

    Salisbury is one of only 10 of England's 42 cathedrals with its own Works department
  • Revealed: the unsung heroes who excavated Tutankhamun's tomb

    A new exhibition celebrates the Egyptian experts whose role in Howard Carter's famous dig have been disregarded

    Tomb raiders: Egyptologist Howard Carter with a member of his team at the excavation of Tutankhamun's tomb, 1922
  • The Turner Prize has remembered why it exists

    After a series of modish decisions, the Prize has returned to the norm with 4 very engaging nominees

    'THE END' by Heather Phillipson, unveiled on Trafalgar Square's Fourth Plinth
  • The incendiary history of Russian protest fine art

    The Russians protesting Putin with graffiti, blank signs and packets of ham are role of a noble – and unsafe – artistic tradition

    Nadya Tolokonnikova of Pussy Riot performing in March, 2022

In depth

More stories

  • The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe, review: a very British law-breaking story, superbly told

    ITV's new miniseries about how John Darwin faked his own death features superb character acting and dark comic relief

    Eddie Marsan and Monica Dolan as John and Anne Darwin in The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe
  • Jodie Whittaker'southward penultimate Medico Who left the states with one question: will she become the girl?

    Convoluted plotting and feeble monsters distract from the best Who storyline in ages: Yaz and the Dr.'south burgeoning romance.

    Yasmin Khan (Mandip Gill) and The Doctor (Jodie Whittaker) fight Sea Devils in the Doctor Who Easter special
  • The German tycoons who got fat on the Nazi killing machine

    Later reading David de Jong'south Nazi Billonaires, you volition never again buy a Volkswagen, a Dr Oetker pizza or Allianz insurance without unease

    Blood on his hands: German industrialist Friedrich Flick in the dock at Nuremberg, 1947
  • Scandaltown, Mike Bartlett'due south modern-day Restoration comedy, feels like champagne gone apartment

    It's a good premise: a bouncy satire on the lazy thinking behind the culture wars. But the panto-ish effect feels late to the party

    Rachael Stirling as Lady Climber and Thomas Josling as Tom Double-Budget in Mike Bartlett's new play Scandaltown
  • Gunge and custard pies: what happened when ITV's Tiswas reunited on stage, 40 years on

    Chris Tarrant, Emerge James and Spit the Dog came together at St George's, Bristol – and the audience regressed en masse to the 1970s

    From left: John Gorman, Sally James, Bob Carolgees and Chris Tarrant were reunited on stage in Bristol on Easter Saturday 2022
  • What's on Goggle box this night: The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe, Michael Ball: Showtime, Doctor Who and more than

    Your complete guide to the week'south telly, films and sport, beyond terrestrial and digital platforms

    Eddie Marsan plays John Darwin in the ITV drama The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe
  • Forget everything you think yous know about popular

    Bob Stanley's brilliantly entertaining book The Birth of Popular reveals how popular trends were made, and how racism has skewed the narrative

    Elvis Presley became a figurehead for rock'n'roll, but he owed his sound to black artists
  • The Premonitions Bureau: how 1960s scientists tried to predict disasters through dreams

    Sam Knight'due south atmospheric volume investigates a forgotten branch of psychiatry which sought to harness the power of spookily prophetic visions

    Unforeseen? The aftermath of the Aberfan disaster in 1966

bartlettguile1953.blogspot.com

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

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