Im Not God at Drawing but I Love Urban Planning
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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?
Reviews
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Andy Zaltzman: a teeming comic brain in need of a little reining in
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A feast of Strauss with Andris Nelsons and the Leipzig Gewandhaus, plus the best of May's classical concerts
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Dreamachine: less relaxing than cycling home afterwards on the A206
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Minnie Driver's memoir spills the beans on Matt Damon, Harvey Weinstein and Hollywood
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Why is Coffin St Edmunds total of headless skeletons?
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Men, review: Imagine if Lars von Trier directed an episode of The League of Gentlemen...
Behind the music
Rock'south untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all fourth dimension
This night's TV
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
In depth
More stories
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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
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'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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/
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