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Meet some of the leading lights of New York’s
Theatres offered something for everyone in the 19th century, presenting recitals and opera, Shakespearean plays, or lively mixed programmes of comedy, song and dance that attracted enthusiastic – and
The unconventional instrumentation favoured by Tortoise is an indicator of how many different lineups have always jostled for space under the jazz umbrella. The national treasure that is The Pete Alle
Leigh Lawson has embraced acting and poetry with the same determination that sustained Marie Lloyd, the music-hall queen whose memorabilia he collects, as Carla Passino discovers
EXHIBITION Zandra Rhodes: A Life in Print In ...
The death of John Coltrane brought profound psychological and spiritual crisis to his wife and musical confederate, Alice. But from it came her adoption of the harp, followed by music of transcendent beauty. In this extract from his magisterial new ALICE COLTRANE biography, ANDY BETA reveals how she stepped into the light: "The piano is the sunrise and the harp is the sunset..."
HENRY JAYNES FONDA was born on May 16, 1905, in Grand Island, Nebraska, and moved to Omaha the following year. Henry was one of three children – he had two sisters – and was raised in a close-knit, re