The Faint Philadelphia Theatre of the Living Arts August 2
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Where Have All the Lesbians Gone? review: thoughtful, moving and a crucial history lesson
This Aqueduct 4 programme is an interesting and important give-and-take of rights, pride and identity
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Julia Bradbury's unflinching business relationship of the savage realities of cancer
Julia Bradbury: Breast Cancer and Me chronicled her painful personal journeying so that others can do good
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Downton Abbey's Allen Leech: 'Maggie Smith loves cat memes'
The Irish actor, who plays Tom Branson, shares some behind-the-scenes secrets
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The day my tap-dancing dream came true
Our writer plucked upward the courage to grit off her tap shoes and join the bandage of the bright 'Anything Goes'
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The sinister story behind the Nazis' 'Baedeker blitz'
The Luftwaffe's raids of 1942 targeted United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland'due south poorly protected tourist traps – selected with the help of a pop German travel guide
Annotate and analysis
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Tin apes prove that gender is not all 'in the mind'?
Evolutionary biologists used to take flak for endorsing the patriarchy. Now they've found an unexpected ally – in radical feminists
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How Hollywood fell out of love with the cowboy
Westerns used to be a crucial part of every moving picture studio's roster, but the strong, silent gunslinger is now persona non grata
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GB News should beware – TalkTV is some other shark in the same swimming
Two channels are chasing the same viewers – and so is Nigel Farage'due south operation in trouble? The probable outcome is far from that elementary
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How Alan Dein is connecting strangers to make the well-nigh electrifying radio
A new series of Alan Dein'southward Don't Log Off explores the things that enliven and inspire people all around the world
Reviews
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Simon Rattle leads a powerful, prescient evening of Weill, plus the best of April's classical concerts
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Mitski at the Roundhouse – Björk-like brilliance for the TikTok era
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Casablanca Beats: this teen drama dances to an all-also-familiar tune
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We're All Going to the World's Fair: indie horror that promises more freakiness than it delivers
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This is what life with agoraphobia is really similar
Behind the music
Rock's untold stories, from ring-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time
Tonight's Boob tube
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What's on Tv set tonight: Hither We Become, Richard Hammond's Crazy Contraptions, the end of Ozark and more
Your complete guide to the calendar week'south television receiver, films and sport, across terrestrial and digital platforms
Screen Secrets
A regular serial telling the stories behind picture and Idiot box's greatest hits – and most fascinating flops
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Can apes prove that gender is non all 'in the mind'?
Evolutionary biologists used to have flak for endorsing the patriarchy. Now they've found an unexpected ally – in radical feminists
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Julia Donaldson: How I fearfulness lockdown may have damaged our children
The bestselling author explains why she worries that coronavirus restrictions has deprived a generation of vital experiences
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The sinister story behind the Nazis' 'Baedeker rush'
The Luftwaffe's raids of 1942 targeted United kingdom's poorly protected tourist traps – selected with the assist of a popular German travel guide
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This is what life with agoraphobia is actually like
In his new book On Agoraphobia, Graham Caveney gives a horrifying – but often cute – business relationship of a life shaped past fear of going outdoors
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From cabbage at 2am to fending off bats – what it was actually like to work at Bletchley Park
This show on the bodily site of the vital Second World State of war cipher-decoding centre delivers fascinating insights into solar day-to-24-hour interval life at that place
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Why the 1990s were the last gold historic period of culture
Alee of a BBC flavour, our critics prove that the happiest decade fabricated the best art
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The Tate's Walter Sickert bear witness is a foggy panorama of Victorian dirt and vice
Tate Britain's exhibition is saturated with as well many similar paintings and misses an opportunity to explore Sickert's interim
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In from the cold: indigenous Sámi artists debut at the Venice Biennale
The native people of the Arctic Circle are highlighting their controversial past from this weekend
In depth
More than stories
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Simon Rattle leads a powerful, prescient evening of Weill, plus the all-time of April's classical concerts
This fascinating all-Weill evening was programmed some time ago – in the lite of current events, it all felt decidedly prophetic
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Mitski at the Roundhouse – Björk-like brilliance for the TikTok era
A rapt audience saw the Japanese-American artist dance through a world of her own, in a varied gear up only occasionally marred by muddy sound
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Willie Nelson at the summit of his powers, Bloc Political party endeavour a comeback – the calendar week'south best albums
The country star touches on mortality with humour, Permit'southward Eat Grandma and Bloc Party return, and Kehlani shines with stripped-back deadening jams
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What'due south on TV tonight: Hither Nosotros Go, Richard Hammond'due south Crazy Contraptions, the terminate of Ozark and more than
Your complete guide to the week's television, films and sport, beyond terrestrial and digital platforms
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Plow on, tune in: the l all-time podcasts to mind to correct now
From the story of an outrageous CIA functioning to a one-act about feuding funeral parlours, Telegraph writers pick the all-time podcasts around
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Tin can apes prove that gender is non all 'in the mind'?
Evolutionary biologists used to take flak for endorsing the patriarchy. Now they've found an unexpected ally – in radical feminists
-
Where Have All the Lesbians Gone? review: thoughtful, moving and a crucial history lesson
This Channel iv programme is an interesting and important word of rights, pride and identity
Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/
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