Im Not God at Drawing but I Love Urban Planning

  • Charlatan, psychopath, saint: who was the real Mother Teresa?

    This Sky documentary serial explores the complexities and credible contradictions of the modern earth'south near famous missionary

    Mother Teresa, pictured in 1993
  • Fergal Keane: Living with PTSD, review: why the BBC war reporter just tin't cease

    In this searing documentary, the war contributor reflects on his condition and concludes he can't, on some level, stop inducing it

  • The Spy Who Died Twice, review: sordid, salacious and oddly nostalgic

    The story of John Stonehouse, the MP who faked his own death, was like gold dust for the British tabloid press

  • How Dennis Waterman and John Thaw's The Sweeney gave bad coppers a good name

    Screen cops once were dull pencil-pushers. Then Regan and Carter kicked the doors in, and Goggle box – and policing itself – would never be the same

  • Plow on, tune in: the fifty best podcasts to heed to right at present

    From the story of an outrageous CIA performance to a one-act about feuding funeral parlours, Telegraph writers selection the best podcasts around

Comment and analysis

  • Sam Ryder may finally provide Great britain a winning shot at Eurovision

    The charismatic TikTok metal head is the Great britain'south Eurovision entry for 2022, and may stand for our all-time chance in decades

    Sam Ryder UK Eurovision song contest winner winning entry 2022 official music
  • Christie's 'Marilyn' sale is a rebuke to the Warhol naysayers

    While the actual sale lacked a sense of theatre, the $195 million sale breathed life dorsum into the Pop artist'southward sluggish sales

    Trophy: Andy Warhol's Shot Sage Blue Marilyn (1964)
  • Tariq Ali's Churchill biography is a Marxist insult to history

    The former soixante-huitard's new book, Winston Churchill: His Times, His Crimes, sets ideological hang-ups higher up serious research

    Police officers guard Winston Churchill's statue in Parliament Square in 2020
  • Why Information technology's A Sin flopped at the Baftas

    Russell T Davies's adored Aids drama left the ceremony empty-handed, prompting much bafflement and anger. Merely did it truly deserve to win?

    Snubbed? Lydia West and Olly Alexander in It's A Sin

Reviews

  • Andy Zaltzman: a teeming comic brain in need of a little reining in

    It'due south difficult non to warm to the topical comedian, though some tighening upwards of his touring show – at the Soho Theatre – could piece of work wonders

    Andy Zaltzman
  • A feast of Strauss with Andris Nelsons and the Leipzig Gewandhaus, plus the best of May's classical concerts

    Monday night at the Barbican saw the venerable High german orchestra make a strong claim for itself as the world'south greatest

    The Leipzig Gewandhausorchestre with Andris Nelsons at the Barbican
  • Dreamachine: less relaxing than cycling home afterwards on the A206

    Unboxed – aka the Festival of Brexit – has served up some other turkey with this supposedly transporting installation at Woolwich Public Market

    Dreamachine
  • Minnie Driver's memoir spills the beans on Matt Damon, Harvey Weinstein and Hollywood

    The Skilful Volition Hunting star'due south new book Managing Expectations is far funnier – and more shocking – than the boilerplate celebrity memoir

    Book review Minnie Driver
  • Why is Coffin St Edmunds total of headless skeletons?

    In her new book Buried, TV archaeologist Alice Roberts investigates Bury's decapitated expressionless – and other murky tales of medieval Great britain

    Book review Buried by Alice Roberts
  • Men, review: Imagine if Lars von Trier directed an episode of The League of Gentlemen...

    Alex Garland's horrific tale of male malevolence stars Rory Kinnear equally every man in the hamlet that Jessie Buckley'southward grieving widow visits

    Rory Kinnear in Men

Behind the music

Rock'south untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all fourth dimension

This night's TV

  • What'due south on TV tonight: The Spy Who Died Twice, The Airport: Dorsum in the Skies, and more

    Your complete guide to the calendar week's television, films and sport, across terrestrial and digital platforms

Screen Secrets

A regular serial telling the stories backside pic and TV's greatest hits – and most fascinating flops

  • Minnie Driver'southward memoir spills the beans on Matt Damon, Harvey Weinstein and Hollywood

    The Good Will Hunting star's new book Managing Expectations is far funnier – and more shocking – than the average celebrity memoir

    Book review Minnie Driver
  • Tariq Ali's Churchill biography is a Marxist insult to history

    The former soixante-huitard's new book, Winston Churchill: His Times, His Crimes, sets ideological hang-ups above serious inquiry

    Police officers guard Winston Churchill's statue in Parliament Square in 2020
  • Why is Bury St Edmunds full of headless skeletons?

    In her new book Buried, TV archaeologist Alice Roberts investigates Bury's decapitated dead – and other murky tales of medieval Britain

    Book review Buried by Alice Roberts
  • The 'dancing plague' of 1518 was stranger than fiction – can a novel do it justice?

    Kiran Millwood Hargrave'southward new novel The Trip the light fantastic toe Tree is inspired by a fatal dancing frenzy that struck 16th-century Strasbourg

    Book review The Dance Tree by Kiran Millwood Hargrave
  • Christie's 'Marilyn' sale is a rebuke to the Warhol naysayers

    While the actual sale lacked a sense of theatre, the $195 million sale breathed life dorsum into the Pop creative person's sluggish sales

    Trophy: Andy Warhol's Shot Sage Blue Marilyn (1964)
  • Dreamachine: less relaxing than cycling habitation afterward on the A206

    Unboxed – aka the Festival of Brexit – has served up another turkey with this supposedly transporting installation at Woolwich Public Market place

    Dreamachine
  • See the photographer who took couture off the catwalk and out into the street

    How Frank Horvat started a revolution in fashion photography – and then turned his gaze on Paris's sordid side

    Monique Dutto pictured by Frank Horvat at a Métro exit in Paris, 1959
  • Is Picasso'southward 'Primitivist' art still acceptable?

    Museums have long been wary of this menses in the creative person's professional person life. In an era of 'cancellation', information technology is fifty-fifty more pertinent

    'A radical new visual language': Pablo Picasso

In depth

More stories

  • Plough on, tune in: the 50 all-time podcasts to listen to right at present

    From the story of an outrageous CIA performance to a one-act most feuding funeral parlours, Telegraph writers pick the all-time podcasts around

    best podcasts play listen to now may 2022
  • 'Ukraine has to win – in all senses': the Eurovision favourite singing to save his country

    For Oleh Psiuk and his group Kalush Orchestra, the 2022 Eurovision Song Contest has become much more than just a music competition

    'For Ukraine, Eurovision always mattered': Oleh Psiuk and Kalush Orchestra
  • Sam Ryder may finally provide Britain a winning shot at Eurovision

    The charismatic TikTok metal head is the UK'south Eurovision entry for 2022, and may represent our best take chances in decades

    Sam Ryder UK Eurovision song contest winner winning entry 2022 official music
  • Inside Sam Raimi'due south cinematic multiverse of madness

    How a DIY splatter director armed with a shaky camera become Hollywood's wildest – and most influential – genre-bender

    Bruce Campbell as Ash Williams in Evil Dead II
  • Christie'due south 'Marilyn' sale is a rebuke to the Warhol naysayers

    While the bodily auction lacked a sense of theatre, the $195 million auction breathed life back into the Pop artist's sluggish sales

    Trophy: Andy Warhol's Shot Sage Blue Marilyn (1964)
  • Andy Zaltzman: a teeming comic encephalon in demand of a niggling reining in

    It's difficult not to warm to the topical comedian, though some tighening upwards of his touring prove – at the Soho Theatre – could work wonders

    Andy Zaltzman
  • A banquet of Strauss with Andris Nelsons and the Leipzig Gewandhaus, plus the all-time of May's classical concerts

    Monday night at the Barbican saw the venerable German language orchestra make a strong claim for itself every bit the world's greatest

    The Leipzig Gewandhausorchestre with Andris Nelsons at the Barbican
  • Dreamachine: less relaxing than cycling home afterwards on the A206

    Unboxed – aka the Festival of Brexit – has served up another turkey with this supposedly transporting installation at Woolwich Public Market

    Dreamachine

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

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