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Back to dark side
Twelve years after she converted from atheism, author of Interview with the Vampire abandons Christianity over its attitude to birth control, homosexuality and scienceTwelve years after she converted to Christianity from atheism, bestselling author Anne Rice has "quit being a Christian" because of the religion's attitude to birth control, homosexuality and science.In a message posted on her Facebook page, Rice said she was "out". "In the name of Christ, I refuse to be anti-gay. I refuse to be anti-feminist. I refuse to be anti-artificial birth control. I refuse to be anti-Democrat. I refuse to be anti-secular humanism. I refuse to be anti-science. I refuse to be anti-life. In the name of Christ, I quit Christianity and being Christian. Amen," the author wrote.An atheist for decades, Rice returned to her childhood faith of Catholicism in 1998. The author of a series of bestselling books about the vampire Lestat - brought to the screen by Tom Cruise in the film Interview with the Vampire - her conversion caused consternation among her old fans, while Christians questioned the morality of her vampire books.In a 2007 essay, Rice answered her critics, saying that she saw her earlier novels as part of a long tradition of "transformative" dark fiction, from Dante's Inferno to Hamlet and Macbeth. "I feel strongly that dark stories demand that the audience earn the transformation; they require a certain suffering on the part of the audience as the price of eventual affirmation," Rice wrote."I would like to submit that my vampire novels and other novels I've written ... are attempting to be transformative stories as well. All these novels involve a strong moral compass. Evil is never glorified in these books; on the contrary, the continuing battle against evil is the subject of the work. The search for the good is the subject of the work. [They] are not immoral works. They are not Satanic works. They are not demonic works. These are uninformed and unfair characterisations of these books, and this situation causes me deep personal pain."In 2002 the author "consecrated her writing entirely to Christ, vowing to write for Him or about Him". She began to write novels about the life of Christ, completing Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt in 2005, and publishing Christ the Lord: The Road to Cana in 2008 when she also released the memoir Called Out of Darkness: A Spiritual Confession, about her conversion at the age of 57. She is currently writing a series about angels, in which a contract killer is recruited by a seraph.Rice posted on Tuesday revealing her distress about a news story in which an American "punk rock ministry" said that "executing gays is 'moral'". "The bottom line is this "
Found on 07/31/2010, 00:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Twelve years after she converted from atheism, author of Interview with the Vampire abandons Christianity over its attitude to birth control, homosexuality and scienceTwelve years after she converted to Christianity from atheism, bestselling author Anne Rice has "quit being a Christian" because of the religion's attitude to birth control, homosexuality and science.In a message posted on her Facebook page, Rice said she was "out". "In the name of Christ, I refuse to be anti-gay. I refuse to be anti-feminist. I refuse to be anti-artificial birth control. I refuse to be anti-Democrat. I refuse to be anti-secular humanism. I refuse to be anti-science. I refuse to be anti-life. In the name of Christ, I quit Christianity and being Christian. Amen," the author wrote.An atheist for decades, Rice returned to her childhood faith of Catholicism in 1998. The author of a series of bestselling books about the vampire Lestat - brought to the screen by Tom Cruise in the film Interview with the Vampire - her conversion caused consternation among her old fans, while Christians questioned the morality of her vampire books.In a 2007 essay, Rice answered her critics, saying that she saw her earlier novels as part of a long tradition of "transformative" dark fiction, from Dante's Inferno to Hamlet and Macbeth. "I feel strongly that dark stories demand that the audience earn the transformation; they require a certain suffering on the part of the audience as the price of eventual affirmation," Rice wrote."I would like to submit that my vampire novels and other novels I've written ... are attempting to be transformative stories as well. All these novels involve a strong moral compass. Evil is never glorified in these books; on the contrary, the continuing battle against evil is the subject of the work. The search for the good is the subject of the work. [They] are not immoral works. They are not Satanic works. They are not demonic works. These are uninformed and unfair characterisations of these books, and this situation causes me deep personal pain."In 2002 the author "consecrated her writing entirely to Christ, vowing to write for Him or about Him". She began to write novels about the life of Christ, completing Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt in 2005, and publishing Christ the Lord: The Road to Cana in 2008 when she also released the memoir Called Out of Darkness: A Spiritual Confession, about her conversion at the age of 57. She is currently writing a series about angels, in which a contract killer is recruited by a seraph.Rice posted on Tuesday revealing her distress about a news story in which an American "punk rock ministry" said that "executing gays is 'moral'". "The bottom line is this "
Found on 07/31/2010, 00:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: Side, dark,
Reel review: The Karate Kid
They've relocated to China and there's more kung fu than karate, but Harald Zwart's revamp of eighties favourite still packs a punch, says Andrew PulverAndrew PulverHenry Barnes
Found on 07/30/2010, 18:08 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
They've relocated to China and there's more kung fu than karate, but Harald Zwart's revamp of eighties favourite still packs a punch, says Andrew PulverAndrew PulverHenry Barnes
Found on 07/30/2010, 18:08 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: review, kid, Reel, karate,
Back on the box
The greatest works always suffer in translation to the tube, but Parade's End could work perfectlyGood to see the BBC is to bring us Tom Stoppard's forthcoming adaptation of Parade's End, Ford Madox Ford's tetralogy. For a start, it gets Stoppard back on the box after 30 years. Spread over five 60-minute parts, meanwhile, this version also sounds about the right length. On top of that, Ford's little-known sequence of novels sounds dead right for television. My view is that the great literary masterpieces always lose through adaptation; it's what you might call first-rate novels of the second rank that invariably gain.It's admittedly a bit cheeky of me to say this as I've never read the four books that make up Parade's End. But I very much like the sound of them. The critic Walter Allen, in Tradition and Dream, tells us that Ford's world is that of the ruling class of Edwardian England. "For the most part," he adds, "Ford's characters are of that world by birth: cabinet ministers, permanent under-secretaries, generals, right-wing journalists." They are also driven not by fame or wealth but by a sense of duty. The big theme of the books is the observance of a code that says: "It isn't done."This strikes me as the kind of thing TV does perfectly - the re-creation of a world on the point of dissolution. And if I think back to some of the great TV adaptations, they are always of books that are very fine without being unassailable masterpieces. John le Carré's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy made brilliant watching because the camerawork and the performances of actors like Alec Guinness and Ian Richardson added an extra layer to the story. Similarly the TV versions of Paul Scott's Raj Quartet, which became The Jewel in the Crown, and Olivia Manning's Balkan Trilogy worked superbly because they were well scripted, made good use of real locations and boasted memorable turns from, for instance, Peggy Ashcroft's Barbie in the former and Kenneth Branagh's Guy Pringle in the latter.Only when it comes to the truly great writers - Austen, Dickens, Tolstoy, Flaubert - does TV fail, producing pale shadows of the original works. The only virtue of adaptations of these authors is that they encourage people to read the originals. Everyone swoons over that BBC version of Pride and Prejudice but what they mostly seem to remember is Colin Firth's wet, clinging shirt. What you can't recreate on the tube is Austen's ironic tone. Learning that Mr Darcy's attentions are now apparently diverted elsewhere, Austen's Elizabeth Bennett reflects: "The sudden acquisition of ten thousand pounds was the most remarkable charm of the young lady to whom he was now rendering himself agreeable." Everything depends on the exquisite balance of the phrasing and the quiet waspishness of tone, neither of which you can capture onscreen.Conversely, television can do justice to supreme storytellers who deal with crumbling societies or closed institutions - writers like John Galsworthy, HG Wells and Arnold Bennett or, nearer our own time, CP Snow, Le Carré and Malcolm Bradbury. Which is why the idea of Stoppard adapting Ford Madox Ford sounds so appetising. Ford's four books reportedly have a strong central character and deal with "the public events of a decade": exactly the kind of panoramic story that works perfectly on the small screen.Tom StoppardTheatreDramaTelevisionMichael Billingtonguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/30/2010, 16:48 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
The greatest works always suffer in translation to the tube, but Parade's End could work perfectlyGood to see the BBC is to bring us Tom Stoppard's forthcoming adaptation of Parade's End, Ford Madox Ford's tetralogy. For a start, it gets Stoppard back on the box after 30 years. Spread over five 60-minute parts, meanwhile, this version also sounds about the right length. On top of that, Ford's little-known sequence of novels sounds dead right for television. My view is that the great literary masterpieces always lose through adaptation; it's what you might call first-rate novels of the second rank that invariably gain.It's admittedly a bit cheeky of me to say this as I've never read the four books that make up Parade's End. But I very much like the sound of them. The critic Walter Allen, in Tradition and Dream, tells us that Ford's world is that of the ruling class of Edwardian England. "For the most part," he adds, "Ford's characters are of that world by birth: cabinet ministers, permanent under-secretaries, generals, right-wing journalists." They are also driven not by fame or wealth but by a sense of duty. The big theme of the books is the observance of a code that says: "It isn't done."This strikes me as the kind of thing TV does perfectly - the re-creation of a world on the point of dissolution. And if I think back to some of the great TV adaptations, they are always of books that are very fine without being unassailable masterpieces. John le Carré's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy made brilliant watching because the camerawork and the performances of actors like Alec Guinness and Ian Richardson added an extra layer to the story. Similarly the TV versions of Paul Scott's Raj Quartet, which became The Jewel in the Crown, and Olivia Manning's Balkan Trilogy worked superbly because they were well scripted, made good use of real locations and boasted memorable turns from, for instance, Peggy Ashcroft's Barbie in the former and Kenneth Branagh's Guy Pringle in the latter.Only when it comes to the truly great writers - Austen, Dickens, Tolstoy, Flaubert - does TV fail, producing pale shadows of the original works. The only virtue of adaptations of these authors is that they encourage people to read the originals. Everyone swoons over that BBC version of Pride and Prejudice but what they mostly seem to remember is Colin Firth's wet, clinging shirt. What you can't recreate on the tube is Austen's ironic tone. Learning that Mr Darcy's attentions are now apparently diverted elsewhere, Austen's Elizabeth Bennett reflects: "The sudden acquisition of ten thousand pounds was the most remarkable charm of the young lady to whom he was now rendering himself agreeable." Everything depends on the exquisite balance of the phrasing and the quiet waspishness of tone, neither of which you can capture onscreen.Conversely, television can do justice to supreme storytellers who deal with crumbling societies or closed institutions - writers like John Galsworthy, HG Wells and Arnold Bennett or, nearer our own time, CP Snow, Le Carré and Malcolm Bradbury. Which is why the idea of Stoppard adapting Ford Madox Ford sounds so appetising. Ford's four books reportedly have a strong central character and deal with "the public events of a decade": exactly the kind of panoramic story that works perfectly on the small screen.Tom StoppardTheatreDramaTelevisionMichael Billingtonguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/30/2010, 16:48 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: Box,
Fears for Britain's trees after Asian beetle discovered
Scientists are on the lookout for an Asian beetle that could ravage British trees after one was found last week, the Food and Environment Research Agency (Fera) said today.
Found on 07/30/2010, 16:27 h, Source: Independent.co.uk
Scientists are on the lookout for an Asian beetle that could ravage British trees after one was found last week, the Food and Environment Research Agency (Fera) said today.
Found on 07/30/2010, 16:27 h, Source: Independent.co.uk
Tags: Asian, Britains, fears, trees
Acceptable in the 80s
Top Gun, the Smiths, The A-Team "
Found on 07/30/2010, 15:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Top Gun, the Smiths, The A-Team "
Found on 07/30/2010, 15:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: 80s, acceptable,
DIY museum
York's Yorkshire Museum has reopened after a major refurbishment - much of the work done by the staffMaev Kennedy
Found on 07/30/2010, 13:01 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
York's Yorkshire Museum has reopened after a major refurbishment - much of the work done by the staffMaev Kennedy
Found on 07/30/2010, 13:01 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: Museum, DIY,
'I can't just sing right now'
Wyclef Jean says he's still deciding whether or not he will make a bid for the presidency of Haiti
Found on 07/30/2010, 10:38 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Wyclef Jean says he's still deciding whether or not he will make a bid for the presidency of Haiti
Found on 07/30/2010, 10:38 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: Now, right, Just, cant, sing,
Fears for unique wildlife of Galapagos as UN drops islands' protected status
A panel of politicians has voted to remove the Galapagos Islands from the UN's list of World Heritage Sites in danger - in spite of a firm recommendation from scientists and officials who visited the islands that they should keep their status.
Found on 07/30/2010, 06:00 h, Source: Independent.co.uk
A panel of politicians has voted to remove the Galapagos Islands from the UN's list of World Heritage Sites in danger - in spite of a firm recommendation from scientists and officials who visited the islands that they should keep their status.
Found on 07/30/2010, 06:00 h, Source: Independent.co.uk
Tags: fears, drops, status, Galapagos
Glorious mud: Finnish footballers, holidaying Koreans and even the Chinese Army have been enjoying its earthy pleasures
Pigs like mud (with the exception of Cinders, the muck-phobic little porker who escaped the sausage machine two summers ago after her owners took pity and fitted her with tiny gumboots). Hippopotamuses like mud, too. But then pigs and hippos are wired to wallow - they don't sweat and mud keeps them cool. What's our excuse?
Found on 07/30/2010, 06:00 h, Source: Independent.co.uk
Pigs like mud (with the exception of Cinders, the muck-phobic little porker who escaped the sausage machine two summers ago after her owners took pity and fitted her with tiny gumboots). Hippopotamuses like mud, too. But then pigs and hippos are wired to wallow - they don't sweat and mud keeps them cool. What's our excuse?
Found on 07/30/2010, 06:00 h, Source: Independent.co.uk
Tags: Chinese, even, been, footballers
A Gainsbourg special
Joann Sfar, best known in France and to fans worldwide as a comic book artist, was the surprise choice to land the job of directing a biopic about one of France's most controversial and cherished modern icons: Serge Gainsbourg.Jason Solomons discusses the challenge of presenting Gainsbourg's life on screen for the first time, and how he used his visual imagination to explore the young Gainsbourg's rise to fame as a chanteur alongside his notoriety as a raconteur, womaniser and hell-raiser.Plus, we have three soundtracks to give away on our Facebook page, Film Weekly Fans. The album was recorded for the film and as yet is not on release in the UK.Jason SolomonsJason Phipps
Found on 07/29/2010, 21:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Joann Sfar, best known in France and to fans worldwide as a comic book artist, was the surprise choice to land the job of directing a biopic about one of France's most controversial and cherished modern icons: Serge Gainsbourg.Jason Solomons discusses the challenge of presenting Gainsbourg's life on screen for the first time, and how he used his visual imagination to explore the young Gainsbourg's rise to fame as a chanteur alongside his notoriety as a raconteur, womaniser and hell-raiser.Plus, we have three soundtracks to give away on our Facebook page, Film Weekly Fans. The album was recorded for the film and as yet is not on release in the UK.Jason SolomonsJason Phipps
Found on 07/29/2010, 21:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: special, Gainsbourg,
Lula snubbed
Cinema owner backs out of showing two-hour movie of Brazilian president's life over Lula's links with Iranian presidentThe story seemed tailor-made for Hollywood: a hardworking country-boy's epic journey from impoverished rural Brazil to the big city and then on to the presidency of one of the largest democracies on Earth.But the producers of a multimillion-dollar biopic about Brazilian leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva say plans for a US release have hit a speedbump after one exhibitor backed out of showing the film, fearing Lula's controversial relationship with Iran might put off audiences.Lula, the Son of Brazil, a two-hour movie about one of the world's most popular presidents, was launched in Brazil on 1 January this year and follows the leftwing leader's rise from the scorched backlands of his country's north-east to the pinnacle of Brazilian politics.With the catchline: "The story of a common man, his family and the extraordinary capacity to overcome difficulties," the film promises a Brazilian take on the American dream.Yet while its producers hope Lula's struggles against adversity will strike a chord with US audiences, the president's strengthening links to the Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad have given at least one New York exhibitor cold feet."We got in touch with this [exhibitor] "
Found on 07/29/2010, 12:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Cinema owner backs out of showing two-hour movie of Brazilian president's life over Lula's links with Iranian presidentThe story seemed tailor-made for Hollywood: a hardworking country-boy's epic journey from impoverished rural Brazil to the big city and then on to the presidency of one of the largest democracies on Earth.But the producers of a multimillion-dollar biopic about Brazilian leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva say plans for a US release have hit a speedbump after one exhibitor backed out of showing the film, fearing Lula's controversial relationship with Iran might put off audiences.Lula, the Son of Brazil, a two-hour movie about one of the world's most popular presidents, was launched in Brazil on 1 January this year and follows the leftwing leader's rise from the scorched backlands of his country's north-east to the pinnacle of Brazilian politics.With the catchline: "The story of a common man, his family and the extraordinary capacity to overcome difficulties," the film promises a Brazilian take on the American dream.Yet while its producers hope Lula's struggles against adversity will strike a chord with US audiences, the president's strengthening links to the Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad have given at least one New York exhibitor cold feet."We got in touch with this [exhibitor] "
Found on 07/29/2010, 12:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: Lula, snubbed,
The dead sea: Global warming blamed for 40 per cent decline in the ocean's phytoplankton
The microscopic plants that support all life in the oceans are dying off at a dramatic rate, according to a study that has documented for the first time a disturbing and unprecedented change at the base of the marine food web.
Found on 07/29/2010, 03:01 h, Source: Independent.co.uk
The microscopic plants that support all life in the oceans are dying off at a dramatic rate, according to a study that has documented for the first time a disturbing and unprecedented change at the base of the marine food web.
Found on 07/29/2010, 03:01 h, Source: Independent.co.uk
Tags: per, Global, 40, Cent, Dead, blamed
Green light for electric car grants
A promised grant of up to £5,000 towards the cost of an electric or ultra-low carbon car has survived Government cutbacks. The Transport Secretary Philip Hammond yesterday said the funding, first announced by the Labour government, will go ahead from January 2011.
Found on 07/29/2010, 03:01 h, Source: Independent.co.uk
A promised grant of up to £5,000 towards the cost of an electric or ultra-low carbon car has survived Government cutbacks. The Transport Secretary Philip Hammond yesterday said the funding, first announced by the Labour government, will go ahead from January 2011.
Found on 07/29/2010, 03:01 h, Source: Independent.co.uk
Tags: Electric, Green, Car, light
Twins peak
Born in Transylvania, twins Gert and Uwe Tobias paint, sculpt and draw with a typewriter. It's bold stuff, says Adrian Searle, and the product of a lifetime of shared obsessionsThere have been several pairs of twins who make art collaboratively. In the 1980s, the American Starn twins began working together on sophisticated photographic projects. The British artists Jane and Louise Wilson, who dislike being referred to as twins, continue to work in film and photography, although like the Chapman brothers (not twins) they have sometimes played up their sibling rivalries in their art. Gert and Uwe Tobias make art that looks as if it has evolved from the kind of private language twins occasionally develop, from mutual shared obsessions, with its repetitive motifs. The work of these Romanian-born identical twins is full of funny heads and scary faces, weird beings with pendulous noses, creepy expressions and peculiar extruded bodies.But there is more to them than funny faces. Theirs is a hybrid art that mixes the old but complex technology of woodcut printing with painting, typography, and the creation of image-poems; they use a typewriter to tap out, rather than draw, hollow-eyed, drooling and grinning satanic faces. Occasional words and exclamations erupt among the red and black "x"s and "o"s, the dashes and dots, like a kind of magic, automatic writing. In fact it is a laborious technique, much used by concrete poets, and by writers and artists as diverse as Carl Andre, the late BS Johnson and by Lawrence Sterne, in his 1759 novel Tristram Shandy.Like Sterne, the Tobias twins parody and recycle all sorts of styles and quotations in their work. Their sometimes mural-scaled woodcuts are on occasion entirely abstract, using repeated forms and shapes taken from Romanian folk-art decoration and 1920s Russian suprematism, to create a sort of complicated geometric abstraction that looks like painting, or poster art, but is neither. Other woodcuts appear both folkloric - shapes that look cut out with pinking shears - and peculiarly modern, playing on the carnivalesque and the biomorphs of Joan Miro. But the Tobiases are good at covering their tracks; it's hard to know exactly where their influences lie. Their art is a sort of grand fabrication.In this show, the presentation of their work (which includes prints, paintings, collages, ceramic sculptures) is further complicated by painting directly on the walls behind and in between. The twins are playing games with us. In one corner, a group of ceramics crowds a shelf. A misshapen, lumpy head emerges from a commercial jug. A turd-like thing stands on a bird's-foot-cum-tree-root in a little bowl. There are dirty, slip-glazed, excremental figures, horrible shiny white creatures with brown stains running down them that you wouldn't want to touch. All this is very deliberate and scatological.Among the woodcuts, there is a figure (pictured, top left) whose ear is a lamb chop or a map of South America; an eye like a fish set in a doily; a red tit with a white nipple grows inexplicably out of his forehead. Oh, deary me, I feel for this figure. I also feel my credulity is being stretched. Some of the Tobiases' small, delicately painted, translucent heads are more like photographic negatives of ghosts, or scraperboard illustrations of long-dead relatives.Their work has always intrigued me, not least because of its collision between outmoded skills and a knowing postmodernity. Their art is unmistakable, but unplaceable. Sometimes they are like faux-naive outsider artists playing at being insiders, or, conversely, art world operators playing at being visionaries. Much is often made - not least by the artists themselves - of their Transylvanian childhood, and of the Dracula legend they were entirely unaware of until they moved to Germany when they were 12. All this, too, has been morphed into their art.At Nottingham Contemporary, the Tobiases share the gallery with a large selection of photographs by Diane Arbus, one of the best of the travelling Artist Rooms devised by collector-turned-donor Anthony D'Offay. Arbus's photographs of mental patients dressed up for Halloween, proud transvestites and a catalogue of bizarre and alarming eccentrics, are far stranger, as well as more sophisticated and direct, than anything the Tobias twins have yet cooked up.ArtAdrian Searleguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 23:01 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Born in Transylvania, twins Gert and Uwe Tobias paint, sculpt and draw with a typewriter. It's bold stuff, says Adrian Searle, and the product of a lifetime of shared obsessionsThere have been several pairs of twins who make art collaboratively. In the 1980s, the American Starn twins began working together on sophisticated photographic projects. The British artists Jane and Louise Wilson, who dislike being referred to as twins, continue to work in film and photography, although like the Chapman brothers (not twins) they have sometimes played up their sibling rivalries in their art. Gert and Uwe Tobias make art that looks as if it has evolved from the kind of private language twins occasionally develop, from mutual shared obsessions, with its repetitive motifs. The work of these Romanian-born identical twins is full of funny heads and scary faces, weird beings with pendulous noses, creepy expressions and peculiar extruded bodies.But there is more to them than funny faces. Theirs is a hybrid art that mixes the old but complex technology of woodcut printing with painting, typography, and the creation of image-poems; they use a typewriter to tap out, rather than draw, hollow-eyed, drooling and grinning satanic faces. Occasional words and exclamations erupt among the red and black "x"s and "o"s, the dashes and dots, like a kind of magic, automatic writing. In fact it is a laborious technique, much used by concrete poets, and by writers and artists as diverse as Carl Andre, the late BS Johnson and by Lawrence Sterne, in his 1759 novel Tristram Shandy.Like Sterne, the Tobias twins parody and recycle all sorts of styles and quotations in their work. Their sometimes mural-scaled woodcuts are on occasion entirely abstract, using repeated forms and shapes taken from Romanian folk-art decoration and 1920s Russian suprematism, to create a sort of complicated geometric abstraction that looks like painting, or poster art, but is neither. Other woodcuts appear both folkloric - shapes that look cut out with pinking shears - and peculiarly modern, playing on the carnivalesque and the biomorphs of Joan Miro. But the Tobiases are good at covering their tracks; it's hard to know exactly where their influences lie. Their art is a sort of grand fabrication.In this show, the presentation of their work (which includes prints, paintings, collages, ceramic sculptures) is further complicated by painting directly on the walls behind and in between. The twins are playing games with us. In one corner, a group of ceramics crowds a shelf. A misshapen, lumpy head emerges from a commercial jug. A turd-like thing stands on a bird's-foot-cum-tree-root in a little bowl. There are dirty, slip-glazed, excremental figures, horrible shiny white creatures with brown stains running down them that you wouldn't want to touch. All this is very deliberate and scatological.Among the woodcuts, there is a figure (pictured, top left) whose ear is a lamb chop or a map of South America; an eye like a fish set in a doily; a red tit with a white nipple grows inexplicably out of his forehead. Oh, deary me, I feel for this figure. I also feel my credulity is being stretched. Some of the Tobiases' small, delicately painted, translucent heads are more like photographic negatives of ghosts, or scraperboard illustrations of long-dead relatives.Their work has always intrigued me, not least because of its collision between outmoded skills and a knowing postmodernity. Their art is unmistakable, but unplaceable. Sometimes they are like faux-naive outsider artists playing at being insiders, or, conversely, art world operators playing at being visionaries. Much is often made - not least by the artists themselves - of their Transylvanian childhood, and of the Dracula legend they were entirely unaware of until they moved to Germany when they were 12. All this, too, has been morphed into their art.At Nottingham Contemporary, the Tobiases share the gallery with a large selection of photographs by Diane Arbus, one of the best of the travelling Artist Rooms devised by collector-turned-donor Anthony D'Offay. Arbus's photographs of mental patients dressed up for Halloween, proud transvestites and a catalogue of bizarre and alarming eccentrics, are far stranger, as well as more sophisticated and direct, than anything the Tobias twins have yet cooked up.ArtAdrian Searleguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 23:01 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: peak, Twins,
Running on empty
Sherlock got rave reviews this week, and looks set to win awards. So why is it going out in the dog days of summer?The overwhelmingly positive response to Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss's drama Sherlock, which started on BBC1 at the weekend, suggests that it will be a strong contender when it comes to this year's TV prizes. If the scripts, direction and Benedict Cumberbatch's portrayal of a modern Sherlock Holmes continue at the level set by the opener, my own view is that this show may go on to rank as a classic.Yet many admiring critics have struck the same note of incredulity: why was a show of this quality being broadcast in the third week of July, when British television, run by deputy executives while the real ones holiday in Tuscany or Cape Cod, traditionally resorts to repeats and rejects?It may be that some at the BBC failed to appreciate the hit they had on their hands. It could be that Sherlock was simply unlucky in being ready for broadcast in 2010: any spring and summer in which a general election is followed by a World Cup significantly reduces the slots available for drama.The most welcome explanation, however, would be that Sherlock was deliberately placed in this unfashionable period in the hope of challenging the still-pervasive idea that there is a calendar of validity in the arts. Broadcasting still sticks with surprising rigidity to the belief that nothing cultural happens in July or August, resulting in a division of the artistic year into quasi-scholastic terms. The BBC's film review show, which Claudia Winkleman is about to take over from Jonathan Ross, has always vanished for the hottest months, as do arts programmes such as The Culture Show (except for a visit to the Edinburgh festival).The assumption behind these seasons - that entertainment takes a vacation - is becoming less and less true. Hollywood has increasingly developed the genre of the "summer blockbuster", especially since the rise of child-friendly cinema, which makes it sensible to release key material during the long school summer holidays. This year's holidaying TV arts shows have missed Toy Story 3, which seems likely to feature in most lists of 2010's best releases, as well as Christopher Nolan's Inception, one of the most talked-about movies of the year.The premieres of major theatrical productions have also become less sensitive to the weather. David Tennant's Hamlet, an undoubted highlight of 2008, opened in Stratford in August, forcing some critics to interrupt or delay planned holidays. One reason for the summer premiere was Tennant's Doctor Who filming schedule: the TV and film industries generally take a summer hiatus, which often results in big July and August openings in the theatre. David Hyde Pierce, Whoopi Goldberg, Jeff Goldblum and Rachel Weisz have all debuted in the West End in the summer months, a spell that producers might until recently have dismissed as a wasteland.Battle of the BookersThe sense of a strict artistic calendar is gradually being fractured, although it still exists at the major national galleries - the Tate, the Royal Academy, the British Museum and others - which continue to open their big shows in a conventional rotation of the seasons, and often in the very same week. Although these sudden clusters of openings every few months can be infuriating to critics and arts editors, the commercial advantage to the galleries is that tourists can plan trips to take in several big new shows at once. It will be interesting to see if the impending culture cuts, forcing some institutions to reduce their number of exhibitions, will threaten this neat pattern.In the publishing world, the biggest rush of new books comes in the early autumn and the early spring. This week saw the publication of the Man Booker Prize longlist, and there is compelling evidence that a novel's publication date may significantly affect its chances of collecting the final cheque. Of the 10 most recent winners - from Peter Carey in 2000 to Hilary Mantel last year - eight were released in the first half of the year, between January and June, with the majority clustered around the Easter season. Only two of the titles to win - Kiran Desai's The Inheritance of Loss, Margaret Atwood's The Blind Assassin - reached the shops around the beginning of September, the time most popular with publishers for putting out upmarket fiction.This strongly suggests that Booker judges have been repeatedly kinder to work from earlier in the year: either because they were able to read them before they became worn down by a torrent of volumes, or because these books are more likely to be available in a finished form (autumn submissions may be sent to judges in proof or even manuscript form). The other disadvantage of later publication is that a book by a Bookeresque name published later in the season can be marked as a failure if it doesn't make the late July longlist or the early September shortlist. For this reason, the months of July and August - once a desert in publishing - have become increasingly busy: Howard Jacobson's The Finkler Question and Tom McCarthy's C have succeeded in reaching the longlist in the week of their actual publication, maximising the publicity effect. Still, if the recent pattern continues, the eventual winner will be a spring entrant, which may be propitious for David Mitchell's The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet - published in May.In the end, there's no "right" time for good art. If only to prevent all future Booker wannabes being published as the evenings lengthen, it might be a good thing if a September book won. Equally, one of the many reasons for giving Sherlock a Bafta would be to kill for ever the belief that summer is a dumping ground when it comes to TV.SherlockTelevisionTheatreSalman RushdieMark Lawsonguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 22:31 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Sherlock got rave reviews this week, and looks set to win awards. So why is it going out in the dog days of summer?The overwhelmingly positive response to Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss's drama Sherlock, which started on BBC1 at the weekend, suggests that it will be a strong contender when it comes to this year's TV prizes. If the scripts, direction and Benedict Cumberbatch's portrayal of a modern Sherlock Holmes continue at the level set by the opener, my own view is that this show may go on to rank as a classic.Yet many admiring critics have struck the same note of incredulity: why was a show of this quality being broadcast in the third week of July, when British television, run by deputy executives while the real ones holiday in Tuscany or Cape Cod, traditionally resorts to repeats and rejects?It may be that some at the BBC failed to appreciate the hit they had on their hands. It could be that Sherlock was simply unlucky in being ready for broadcast in 2010: any spring and summer in which a general election is followed by a World Cup significantly reduces the slots available for drama.The most welcome explanation, however, would be that Sherlock was deliberately placed in this unfashionable period in the hope of challenging the still-pervasive idea that there is a calendar of validity in the arts. Broadcasting still sticks with surprising rigidity to the belief that nothing cultural happens in July or August, resulting in a division of the artistic year into quasi-scholastic terms. The BBC's film review show, which Claudia Winkleman is about to take over from Jonathan Ross, has always vanished for the hottest months, as do arts programmes such as The Culture Show (except for a visit to the Edinburgh festival).The assumption behind these seasons - that entertainment takes a vacation - is becoming less and less true. Hollywood has increasingly developed the genre of the "summer blockbuster", especially since the rise of child-friendly cinema, which makes it sensible to release key material during the long school summer holidays. This year's holidaying TV arts shows have missed Toy Story 3, which seems likely to feature in most lists of 2010's best releases, as well as Christopher Nolan's Inception, one of the most talked-about movies of the year.The premieres of major theatrical productions have also become less sensitive to the weather. David Tennant's Hamlet, an undoubted highlight of 2008, opened in Stratford in August, forcing some critics to interrupt or delay planned holidays. One reason for the summer premiere was Tennant's Doctor Who filming schedule: the TV and film industries generally take a summer hiatus, which often results in big July and August openings in the theatre. David Hyde Pierce, Whoopi Goldberg, Jeff Goldblum and Rachel Weisz have all debuted in the West End in the summer months, a spell that producers might until recently have dismissed as a wasteland.Battle of the BookersThe sense of a strict artistic calendar is gradually being fractured, although it still exists at the major national galleries - the Tate, the Royal Academy, the British Museum and others - which continue to open their big shows in a conventional rotation of the seasons, and often in the very same week. Although these sudden clusters of openings every few months can be infuriating to critics and arts editors, the commercial advantage to the galleries is that tourists can plan trips to take in several big new shows at once. It will be interesting to see if the impending culture cuts, forcing some institutions to reduce their number of exhibitions, will threaten this neat pattern.In the publishing world, the biggest rush of new books comes in the early autumn and the early spring. This week saw the publication of the Man Booker Prize longlist, and there is compelling evidence that a novel's publication date may significantly affect its chances of collecting the final cheque. Of the 10 most recent winners - from Peter Carey in 2000 to Hilary Mantel last year - eight were released in the first half of the year, between January and June, with the majority clustered around the Easter season. Only two of the titles to win - Kiran Desai's The Inheritance of Loss, Margaret Atwood's The Blind Assassin - reached the shops around the beginning of September, the time most popular with publishers for putting out upmarket fiction.This strongly suggests that Booker judges have been repeatedly kinder to work from earlier in the year: either because they were able to read them before they became worn down by a torrent of volumes, or because these books are more likely to be available in a finished form (autumn submissions may be sent to judges in proof or even manuscript form). The other disadvantage of later publication is that a book by a Bookeresque name published later in the season can be marked as a failure if it doesn't make the late July longlist or the early September shortlist. For this reason, the months of July and August - once a desert in publishing - have become increasingly busy: Howard Jacobson's The Finkler Question and Tom McCarthy's C have succeeded in reaching the longlist in the week of their actual publication, maximising the publicity effect. Still, if the recent pattern continues, the eventual winner will be a spring entrant, which may be propitious for David Mitchell's The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet - published in May.In the end, there's no "right" time for good art. If only to prevent all future Booker wannabes being published as the evenings lengthen, it might be a good thing if a September book won. Equally, one of the many reasons for giving Sherlock a Bafta would be to kill for ever the belief that summer is a dumping ground when it comes to TV.SherlockTelevisionTheatreSalman RushdieMark Lawsonguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 22:31 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: running, empty,
Forza del Destino
Holland Park, LondonNever lacking in ambition, Opera Holland Park has set itself arguably its biggest challenge yet with its first production of Verdi's vast and sprawling tragedy. The Force of Destiny was written in the middle years of the composer's career, and founded on a Spanish play by the Duke of Rivas that is the epitome of literary romanticism. In a weak production, the opera easily falls apart, its disparate elements flying off with the centrifugal force of a piece that spins not on one axis, but two. Yet it is a mark of the strength of Martin Duncan's production - with starkly atmospheric designs by Alison Chitty, and imaginatively lit by Mark Jonathan - that the plot's concentric circles not only hold together but steadily tighten their grip right up to the unexpected final glimpse of redemption.The opera ostensibly concerns the power of fate, exemplified in the way that the two sundered lovers - Leonora and Don Alvaro - are pursued over the course of many years by Leonora's brother, Don Carlo, who is obsessed by his desire to avenge his father's accidental death and the stain blemishing his family's honour caused by his sister attempting to elope with a Peruvian of mixed race. Around them war is raging, cheered on by those profiteering from the carnage. Its attendant suffering is grudgingly ameliorated by the misanthropic Brother Melitone, a representative of the church who is entirely devoid of Christian feeling.Verdi sets the task of welding the intimate emotional involvement of the central trio into a broader panoramic view, presenting both a vision of human conflict and a critique of religion. Duncan and his team largely rise to the challenge.Their epic presentation is sustained by Stuart Stratford's immensely stylish conducting, and by orchestral playing that never falters, as well as by a cast whose members hurl themselves at roles demanding Maserati voices, firing on all cylinders. As the tragic Leonora, Gweneth-Ann Jeffers offers a soprano of huge potential, her voice's generous richness of timbre occasionally offset by fragmented phrasing, but a great performance lies within her grasp. Peter Auty's determined Don Alvaro steers on a confident tide of lyrical tone, and the vigorous malice of Don Carlo is etched in vocal fire by Mark Stone. Mikhail Svetlov's humane Father Superior, Donald Maxwell's mean-spirited Melitone and Carole Wilson's cheerleader, Preziosilla, all stand out.Rating: 4/5OperaClassical musicGiuseppe VerdiGeorge Hallguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 22:29 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Holland Park, LondonNever lacking in ambition, Opera Holland Park has set itself arguably its biggest challenge yet with its first production of Verdi's vast and sprawling tragedy. The Force of Destiny was written in the middle years of the composer's career, and founded on a Spanish play by the Duke of Rivas that is the epitome of literary romanticism. In a weak production, the opera easily falls apart, its disparate elements flying off with the centrifugal force of a piece that spins not on one axis, but two. Yet it is a mark of the strength of Martin Duncan's production - with starkly atmospheric designs by Alison Chitty, and imaginatively lit by Mark Jonathan - that the plot's concentric circles not only hold together but steadily tighten their grip right up to the unexpected final glimpse of redemption.The opera ostensibly concerns the power of fate, exemplified in the way that the two sundered lovers - Leonora and Don Alvaro - are pursued over the course of many years by Leonora's brother, Don Carlo, who is obsessed by his desire to avenge his father's accidental death and the stain blemishing his family's honour caused by his sister attempting to elope with a Peruvian of mixed race. Around them war is raging, cheered on by those profiteering from the carnage. Its attendant suffering is grudgingly ameliorated by the misanthropic Brother Melitone, a representative of the church who is entirely devoid of Christian feeling.Verdi sets the task of welding the intimate emotional involvement of the central trio into a broader panoramic view, presenting both a vision of human conflict and a critique of religion. Duncan and his team largely rise to the challenge.Their epic presentation is sustained by Stuart Stratford's immensely stylish conducting, and by orchestral playing that never falters, as well as by a cast whose members hurl themselves at roles demanding Maserati voices, firing on all cylinders. As the tragic Leonora, Gweneth-Ann Jeffers offers a soprano of huge potential, her voice's generous richness of timbre occasionally offset by fragmented phrasing, but a great performance lies within her grasp. Peter Auty's determined Don Alvaro steers on a confident tide of lyrical tone, and the vigorous malice of Don Carlo is etched in vocal fire by Mark Stone. Mikhail Svetlov's humane Father Superior, Donald Maxwell's mean-spirited Melitone and Carole Wilson's cheerleader, Preziosilla, all stand out.Rating: 4/5OperaClassical musicGiuseppe VerdiGeorge Hallguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 22:29 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: Forza, Del, destino,
Feted authors 'unworthy'
Gabriel Josipovici dismisses the portrayal of Barnes, Rushdie and co as modern literary giantsTheir mantelpieces might creak under the collective weight of literary gongs but, according to one leading academic, leading contemporary British authors such as Salman Rushdie, Ian McEwan and Julian Barnes are unworthy of the accolades they receive.In an outspoken attack, Gabriel Josipovici, the former Weidenfeld professor of comparative literature at Oxford University, condemned the work of the giants of the modern English novel as hollow. He said they were like "prep-school boys showing off" and virtually indistinguishable from one another in scope and ambition.The fact that such writers had won so many awards was "a mystery", Josipovici told the Guardian. He added: "It's an ill-educated public being fed by the media - 'This is what great art is' - and they lap it up."It is a view apparently now shared by at least some others, given that the latest offerings by Martin Amis, McEwan and Rushdie were among the more prominent omissions from this year's Man Booker longlist, revealed earlier this week."We are in a very fallow period," Josipovici said, calling the contemporary English novel "profoundly disappointing - a poor relation of its ground-breaking modernist forebears".He said: "Reading Barnes, like reading so many other English writers of his generation - Martin Amis, McEwan - leaves me feeling that I and the world have been made smaller and meaner. The irony which at first made one smile, the precision of language which was at first so satisfying, the cynicism which at first was used only to puncture pretension, in the end come to seem like a terrible constriction, a fear of opening oneself up to the world."I wonder, though, where it came from, this petty-bourgeois uptightness, this terror of not being in control, this schoolboy desire to boast and to shock." Such faults were less generally evident in Irish, American, or continental European writing, he added.Laurence Sterne's 18th-century novel Tristram Shandy remained more avant-garde than the so-called avant-garde today, Josipovici argued."An author like Salman Rushdie takes from Sterne all the tricks without recognising the darkness underneath. You feel Rushdie's just showing off rather than giving a sense of genuine exploration."Currently a research professor at Sussex University, Josipovici hopes the criticisms - to feature in a forthcoming book, What Ever Happened to Modernism? - will spark a wide-ranging debate on the assessment of modern English literature.While great novels deal with complex events beyond the full understanding of both the characters and the reader, too many contemporary works follow traditional plots with neat endings, he said.Referring to graduates, like McEwan, of the University of East Anglia's famous creative writing course, Josipovici said: "They all tell stories in a way that is well crafted, but that is almost the most depressing aspect of it - a careful craft which seems to me to be hollow."He singled out The Comfort of Strangers, McEwan's story of obsession, as easy to read but lacking "a sense of destiny, of other worlds suggested but lying beyond words", unlike that experienced through Proust or Henry James. McEwan's novel is read "to pass the time", he said.Such novels had a "lack of vision and limited horizons"."One finishes them and feels, 'So what?' - so very different from the gut-wrenching experience of reading Herman Melville's Bartleby or William Golding's The Inheritors," said Josipovici.He also cited Guerrillas, the 1975 colonialism story by VS Naipaul, which he described as "exquisitely crafted in order to conceal the joints" but "to which we certainly would not want to return", and Julian Barnes, whose novels have a "smart alec, slightly anxious quality" to them.Josipovici extended his criticism to one of the behemoths of modern US writing, Philip Roth."For all Roth's playfulness - a heavy-handed playfulness at the best of times - he never doubts the validity of what he is doing or his ability to find a language adequate to his needs. As a result, his works may be funny, they may be thought-provoking, but only as good journalism can be funny and thought-provoking."Overall, he said, while the likes of Kafka were plagued by self-doubt, his modern peers seemed arrogant and self-satisfied, "which is mildly depressing".Many of the authors named by Josipovici are published by Random House. A spokesman for the publisher said: "Obviously we wouldn't agree. I don't think the authors would want to comment either."Salman RushdieJulian BarnesIan McEwanFictionDalya Albergeguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 19:25 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Gabriel Josipovici dismisses the portrayal of Barnes, Rushdie and co as modern literary giantsTheir mantelpieces might creak under the collective weight of literary gongs but, according to one leading academic, leading contemporary British authors such as Salman Rushdie, Ian McEwan and Julian Barnes are unworthy of the accolades they receive.In an outspoken attack, Gabriel Josipovici, the former Weidenfeld professor of comparative literature at Oxford University, condemned the work of the giants of the modern English novel as hollow. He said they were like "prep-school boys showing off" and virtually indistinguishable from one another in scope and ambition.The fact that such writers had won so many awards was "a mystery", Josipovici told the Guardian. He added: "It's an ill-educated public being fed by the media - 'This is what great art is' - and they lap it up."It is a view apparently now shared by at least some others, given that the latest offerings by Martin Amis, McEwan and Rushdie were among the more prominent omissions from this year's Man Booker longlist, revealed earlier this week."We are in a very fallow period," Josipovici said, calling the contemporary English novel "profoundly disappointing - a poor relation of its ground-breaking modernist forebears".He said: "Reading Barnes, like reading so many other English writers of his generation - Martin Amis, McEwan - leaves me feeling that I and the world have been made smaller and meaner. The irony which at first made one smile, the precision of language which was at first so satisfying, the cynicism which at first was used only to puncture pretension, in the end come to seem like a terrible constriction, a fear of opening oneself up to the world."I wonder, though, where it came from, this petty-bourgeois uptightness, this terror of not being in control, this schoolboy desire to boast and to shock." Such faults were less generally evident in Irish, American, or continental European writing, he added.Laurence Sterne's 18th-century novel Tristram Shandy remained more avant-garde than the so-called avant-garde today, Josipovici argued."An author like Salman Rushdie takes from Sterne all the tricks without recognising the darkness underneath. You feel Rushdie's just showing off rather than giving a sense of genuine exploration."Currently a research professor at Sussex University, Josipovici hopes the criticisms - to feature in a forthcoming book, What Ever Happened to Modernism? - will spark a wide-ranging debate on the assessment of modern English literature.While great novels deal with complex events beyond the full understanding of both the characters and the reader, too many contemporary works follow traditional plots with neat endings, he said.Referring to graduates, like McEwan, of the University of East Anglia's famous creative writing course, Josipovici said: "They all tell stories in a way that is well crafted, but that is almost the most depressing aspect of it - a careful craft which seems to me to be hollow."He singled out The Comfort of Strangers, McEwan's story of obsession, as easy to read but lacking "a sense of destiny, of other worlds suggested but lying beyond words", unlike that experienced through Proust or Henry James. McEwan's novel is read "to pass the time", he said.Such novels had a "lack of vision and limited horizons"."One finishes them and feels, 'So what?' - so very different from the gut-wrenching experience of reading Herman Melville's Bartleby or William Golding's The Inheritors," said Josipovici.He also cited Guerrillas, the 1975 colonialism story by VS Naipaul, which he described as "exquisitely crafted in order to conceal the joints" but "to which we certainly would not want to return", and Julian Barnes, whose novels have a "smart alec, slightly anxious quality" to them.Josipovici extended his criticism to one of the behemoths of modern US writing, Philip Roth."For all Roth's playfulness - a heavy-handed playfulness at the best of times - he never doubts the validity of what he is doing or his ability to find a language adequate to his needs. As a result, his works may be funny, they may be thought-provoking, but only as good journalism can be funny and thought-provoking."Overall, he said, while the likes of Kafka were plagued by self-doubt, his modern peers seemed arrogant and self-satisfied, "which is mildly depressing".Many of the authors named by Josipovici are published by Random House. A spokesman for the publisher said: "Obviously we wouldn't agree. I don't think the authors would want to comment either."Salman RushdieJulian BarnesIan McEwanFictionDalya Albergeguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 19:25 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: authors, unworthy, feted,
Tom Jones
Welsh singer set to knock Eminem off top spot with 40th studio album, Praise & Blame, but hints at collaboration with rapperIt's not unusual to be loved by anyone, as Wales' favourite crooner has been reminding us for a good 45 years. It is, on the other hand, slightly out of the ordinary to be loved by so many that you manage to chalk up a number one album in your 70s, as Pontypridd's finest may achieve this Sunday with his 40th studio album Praise & Blame.Sir Tom Jones, who was today sitting at number one in the midweek chart sales, is on course to become the oldest male musician to have a number 1 album this Sunday, if he knocks Eminem off the top spot.What may be more unusual still is a thinly-veiled suggestion from the septuagenarian sexbomb that he would be like to collaborate with the Detroit rapper currently in pole position. "I couldn't be more proud of this album and I'm really blown away by the response from everyone," he said. "It's great to be top of the charts with Eminem, maybe next time we could be top together."Although the link-up may appear incongruous to some, Jones is likely to be unfazed. As a young man he worked with legends such as Elvis, Stevie Wonder and the Beatles and in recent years has hooked up with artists as diverse as Robbie Williams, Van Morrison and Cerys Matthews.Speaking on the telephone while touring the UK to promote his new album - a critically-lauded collection of gospel and blues-infused songs - Jones, who turned 70 last month, said he had no qualms about being the oldest artist to top the charts."For me that would be the icing on the cake," he said. "It's great to see the album doing so well in the midweeks but if I don't get to number one, I don't get the record - and I do want it."Jones previously held the record when his 1999 album, Reloaded, went to number one. But he lost the crown to Bob Dylan - just a year younger than Jones - when last year's Together Through Life took the top spot.He is proud of the album - which some are calling his "Johnny Cash moment", a reference to the country star's late, reflective American recordings - although Jones rejects any suggestion that he might be on his last legs."I've always been a god-fearing person. This album is spiritual but it's not like I'm coming to the end and seeking redemption," he said.His long-standing enthusiastic lady fans, some of whom may these days struggle to throw a pair of knickers any great distance, will be relieved to hear that he feels in good fettle. "Physically I'm fine. I don't have plastic hips or knees."He does admit, however, that his performances have become less "frantic" as he has matured. "When I was young I was just exploding all the time, whenever there was an instrumental, I never thought of letting the guitar player take a solo - I used to hammer every song."The advice to tone it down on stage was not given recently, but did come from a decent source. "I hate to namedrop," said Jones, in his luscious and still distinctly Welsh voice. "But Frank Sinatra told me that you didn't have to push that hard all the time. I've learnt to let the songs speak for themselves instead of ramming them down people's throats. Maybe I should have done that before, but I was full of vinegar or whatever."Praise & Blame also gained column inches recently after David Sharpe, a vice president at his label Island Records reportedly criticised the album in a "leaked" email to colleagues, dismissing the songs as "hymns" and not the "upbeat tracks" the label had wanted.The email began: "Imagine my surprise when I walked into the office this morning to hear hymns - it could have been Sunday morning. My initial pleasure came to an abrupt halt when I realised that Tom Jones was singing the hymns! I have just listened to the album in its entirety and want to know if this is some sick joke????"But music writers and PR experts have questioned the veracity of the leaked email story, pointing out that the email handily came to light the same week as the record's release, not when it was written on 19 May. Jones insists that the first he heard of it was on a flight from LA to London. "I was frightened that it would put people off before they had even heard the album. I've still had no explanation."Asked if he thought the email was a PR stunt he said: "It sounds like it, it could have been. Why would anyone say that about wanting their money back - I just don't understand it."Island made no direct comment on the email yesterday, but in a statement Ted Cockle, co-president of Island records, made a nod to the brouhaha. "This was always the record that Island records and Sir Tom wanted to make," he said. "Its hugely satisfying that the album has been such a massive success with the critics and public alike. Island are delighted to part of the latest chapter of such a legends outstanding career."Tom JonesEminemAlexandra Toppingguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 19:18 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Welsh singer set to knock Eminem off top spot with 40th studio album, Praise & Blame, but hints at collaboration with rapperIt's not unusual to be loved by anyone, as Wales' favourite crooner has been reminding us for a good 45 years. It is, on the other hand, slightly out of the ordinary to be loved by so many that you manage to chalk up a number one album in your 70s, as Pontypridd's finest may achieve this Sunday with his 40th studio album Praise & Blame.Sir Tom Jones, who was today sitting at number one in the midweek chart sales, is on course to become the oldest male musician to have a number 1 album this Sunday, if he knocks Eminem off the top spot.What may be more unusual still is a thinly-veiled suggestion from the septuagenarian sexbomb that he would be like to collaborate with the Detroit rapper currently in pole position. "I couldn't be more proud of this album and I'm really blown away by the response from everyone," he said. "It's great to be top of the charts with Eminem, maybe next time we could be top together."Although the link-up may appear incongruous to some, Jones is likely to be unfazed. As a young man he worked with legends such as Elvis, Stevie Wonder and the Beatles and in recent years has hooked up with artists as diverse as Robbie Williams, Van Morrison and Cerys Matthews.Speaking on the telephone while touring the UK to promote his new album - a critically-lauded collection of gospel and blues-infused songs - Jones, who turned 70 last month, said he had no qualms about being the oldest artist to top the charts."For me that would be the icing on the cake," he said. "It's great to see the album doing so well in the midweeks but if I don't get to number one, I don't get the record - and I do want it."Jones previously held the record when his 1999 album, Reloaded, went to number one. But he lost the crown to Bob Dylan - just a year younger than Jones - when last year's Together Through Life took the top spot.He is proud of the album - which some are calling his "Johnny Cash moment", a reference to the country star's late, reflective American recordings - although Jones rejects any suggestion that he might be on his last legs."I've always been a god-fearing person. This album is spiritual but it's not like I'm coming to the end and seeking redemption," he said.His long-standing enthusiastic lady fans, some of whom may these days struggle to throw a pair of knickers any great distance, will be relieved to hear that he feels in good fettle. "Physically I'm fine. I don't have plastic hips or knees."He does admit, however, that his performances have become less "frantic" as he has matured. "When I was young I was just exploding all the time, whenever there was an instrumental, I never thought of letting the guitar player take a solo - I used to hammer every song."The advice to tone it down on stage was not given recently, but did come from a decent source. "I hate to namedrop," said Jones, in his luscious and still distinctly Welsh voice. "But Frank Sinatra told me that you didn't have to push that hard all the time. I've learnt to let the songs speak for themselves instead of ramming them down people's throats. Maybe I should have done that before, but I was full of vinegar or whatever."Praise & Blame also gained column inches recently after David Sharpe, a vice president at his label Island Records reportedly criticised the album in a "leaked" email to colleagues, dismissing the songs as "hymns" and not the "upbeat tracks" the label had wanted.The email began: "Imagine my surprise when I walked into the office this morning to hear hymns - it could have been Sunday morning. My initial pleasure came to an abrupt halt when I realised that Tom Jones was singing the hymns! I have just listened to the album in its entirety and want to know if this is some sick joke????"But music writers and PR experts have questioned the veracity of the leaked email story, pointing out that the email handily came to light the same week as the record's release, not when it was written on 19 May. Jones insists that the first he heard of it was on a flight from LA to London. "I was frightened that it would put people off before they had even heard the album. I've still had no explanation."Asked if he thought the email was a PR stunt he said: "It sounds like it, it could have been. Why would anyone say that about wanting their money back - I just don't understand it."Island made no direct comment on the email yesterday, but in a statement Ted Cockle, co-president of Island records, made a nod to the brouhaha. "This was always the record that Island records and Sir Tom wanted to make," he said. "Its hugely satisfying that the album has been such a massive success with the critics and public alike. Island are delighted to part of the latest chapter of such a legends outstanding career."Tom JonesEminemAlexandra Toppingguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 19:18 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: Jones, Tom,
Gang of four
Liam Neeson stars in a boisterous big-screen version of the 80s action TV series. By Peter BradshawAn intermittently entertaining feature-length revival of the 1980s TV series: its flashy hyperactivity bears the unmistakable stamp of co-producers Tony and Ridley Scott. The original show was about a golden-hearted crew of ex-army mercenaries for hire - to good causes only - led by George Peppard as the cigar-chewing Col "Hannibal" Smith and Mr T as the massive and mohicaned Sgt "Bosco" Baracus. Now Liam Neeson is playing Hannibal, and the mixed martial arts-fighter-turned-actor Quinton Jackson plays the mighty Mr T role. Bradley Cooper plays the smooth ladies' man Templeton Peck, and the crew's crazy chopper pilot, "Howling Mad" Murdock, is played by the South African actor Sharlto Copley, from District 9.I can't think of an actor more improbable in a comedy role than Neeson. That great serious bear of a man never looks entirely comfortable in the part of Hannibal. Nonetheless, Neeson does his best, shepherding this allegedly adorable bunch of rule-flouting wild men as they are wrongfully imprisoned for something they didn't do, and then set out to take down the real bad guys and clear their name.The action begins in Baghdad at a time when, it seems, US forces are leaving Iraq. This momentous future event is not signalled by a helicopter on the embassy roof, as in Saigon, but with a cordial and orderly leave-taking between cheerful American soldiers and supportive Iraqis. Hannibal receives an order to take an undercover job: retrieve a Saddam-era printing press used for manufacturing phoney US dollars with a view to undermining the American currency. Hannibal's boys accept the mission but they are betrayed by someone within the US command, and wind up court-martialled and imprisoned - they have to make their breakout from there.Cooper will give his fans something to brood over in The A-Team. He was promoted to star status in The Hangover, where a mysterious comic alchemy got the very best performance out of him and his hunky good frat-boy looks were well deployed. Since then, the magic has worn off. Here he does a lot of lounging around in a slightly metrosexual towel, the effect of which is offset by his hearty, unreflective jock laugh. Jackson's character is a little more nuanced, if that is the correct term, though Copley is very wacky as the over-the-top helicopter pilot. Those who remember his tremendous and subtle performance in District 9 will, again, wonder what has happened. There's a game performance from Patrick Wilson as the creepy CIA man Lynch, who gets some nice throwaway black-comic lines.A selling point of the original TV show was that people rarely, if ever, got killed, and the movie sticks reasonably closely to the spirit of this feelgood practice. Even at the very beginning of the movie, when Hannibal is threatened by two savage dogs, he somehow extricates himself from the situation in such a way as to leave the dogs unharmed. It's soft-centred stuff; efficient entertainment - which, admittedly, is far harder to make than is generally understood. But I think Liam Neeson would be well advised to leave the action-comedy roles alone. Rating: 2/5Action and adventureThrillerPeter Bradshawguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 18:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Liam Neeson stars in a boisterous big-screen version of the 80s action TV series. By Peter BradshawAn intermittently entertaining feature-length revival of the 1980s TV series: its flashy hyperactivity bears the unmistakable stamp of co-producers Tony and Ridley Scott. The original show was about a golden-hearted crew of ex-army mercenaries for hire - to good causes only - led by George Peppard as the cigar-chewing Col "Hannibal" Smith and Mr T as the massive and mohicaned Sgt "Bosco" Baracus. Now Liam Neeson is playing Hannibal, and the mixed martial arts-fighter-turned-actor Quinton Jackson plays the mighty Mr T role. Bradley Cooper plays the smooth ladies' man Templeton Peck, and the crew's crazy chopper pilot, "Howling Mad" Murdock, is played by the South African actor Sharlto Copley, from District 9.I can't think of an actor more improbable in a comedy role than Neeson. That great serious bear of a man never looks entirely comfortable in the part of Hannibal. Nonetheless, Neeson does his best, shepherding this allegedly adorable bunch of rule-flouting wild men as they are wrongfully imprisoned for something they didn't do, and then set out to take down the real bad guys and clear their name.The action begins in Baghdad at a time when, it seems, US forces are leaving Iraq. This momentous future event is not signalled by a helicopter on the embassy roof, as in Saigon, but with a cordial and orderly leave-taking between cheerful American soldiers and supportive Iraqis. Hannibal receives an order to take an undercover job: retrieve a Saddam-era printing press used for manufacturing phoney US dollars with a view to undermining the American currency. Hannibal's boys accept the mission but they are betrayed by someone within the US command, and wind up court-martialled and imprisoned - they have to make their breakout from there.Cooper will give his fans something to brood over in The A-Team. He was promoted to star status in The Hangover, where a mysterious comic alchemy got the very best performance out of him and his hunky good frat-boy looks were well deployed. Since then, the magic has worn off. Here he does a lot of lounging around in a slightly metrosexual towel, the effect of which is offset by his hearty, unreflective jock laugh. Jackson's character is a little more nuanced, if that is the correct term, though Copley is very wacky as the over-the-top helicopter pilot. Those who remember his tremendous and subtle performance in District 9 will, again, wonder what has happened. There's a game performance from Patrick Wilson as the creepy CIA man Lynch, who gets some nice throwaway black-comic lines.A selling point of the original TV show was that people rarely, if ever, got killed, and the movie sticks reasonably closely to the spirit of this feelgood practice. Even at the very beginning of the movie, when Hannibal is threatened by two savage dogs, he somehow extricates himself from the situation in such a way as to leave the dogs unharmed. It's soft-centred stuff; efficient entertainment - which, admittedly, is far harder to make than is generally understood. But I think Liam Neeson would be well advised to leave the action-comedy roles alone. Rating: 2/5Action and adventureThrillerPeter Bradshawguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 18:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: Gang, Four,
Respect agenda
Respect mutual between surprise pairing of former Republican secretary of state and the Queen of SoulIt was an unlikely pairing. Stage left, Condoleezza Rice, the former Republican darling, a classically trained pianist and academic perhaps better known as George Bush's enforcer. Stage right, Aretha Franklin the Queen of Soul, the voice of black emancipation and a performer at the inauguration of Barack Obama.The former US secretary of state and Franklin took the stage last night at Philadelphia's Mann Music Centre in a rare duet. Their aim was to raise money for urban children and awareness for music and the arts.Their appearance in the three-hour concert before an estimated crowd of 8,000 overflowed with Franklin's catalogue of hits and arias from the world of opera and classical music."We decided to give it a try," Franklin said. "So here we are, in the city of Brotherly - and Sisterly - Love."Rice played piano while Franklin sang her hit I Say A Little Prayer as well as My Country, 'Tis of Thee. Earlier in the programme, Rice performed a selection from Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 20 in D Minor with the orchestra, a piece she said she practised furiously.Franklin even tickled the ivories a few times, including for a song from her new album A Woman Falling Out of Love, which will be released later this year. She also sang a duet - The Way We Were - with surprise guest Ronald Isley.The critics weren't convinced by the combination but applauded the cause. The Washington Post said putting the two together on the stage "had a kind of goofy brilliance". While Franklin still gives "a heck of a show", Rice's performance was more circumspect. "Her playing may have been a little foursquare, a little obedient, but that really wasn't the point," the paper said.The Philadelphia Inquirer felt that "history of a sort was in the making".Rice, it noted, was "diplomat first, pianist second", and this showed in her opening Mozart offering: "She wasn't able to voice effectively in the stormier middle section so that the more important material could be heard. On the whole it wasn't an artistic statement as much as an exercise in survival, and, heard from that point of view, she achieved what she set out to do."Rice got a nice, mostly polite reception, but after intermission, the star power intensified exponentially with the arrival of Aretha Franklin. Listeners roared, and she gave them what they came for - Respect, (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman, Think, and more," the Inquirer wrote.Rice has played with big names in the past, including cellist Yo-Yo Ma. But, she said this was "the first time I've played with an orchestra since I was 18."When she learned that Rice played classical music, Franklin sent for one of her recordings "to hear what she sounded like".Previously, she said, "all I had seen of Dr. Rice was in a political atmosphere. It just seemed foreign that she would be a classical pianist."Franklin was surprised."She really does play," Franklin said. "She's formidable."Aretha Franklinguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 18:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Respect mutual between surprise pairing of former Republican secretary of state and the Queen of SoulIt was an unlikely pairing. Stage left, Condoleezza Rice, the former Republican darling, a classically trained pianist and academic perhaps better known as George Bush's enforcer. Stage right, Aretha Franklin the Queen of Soul, the voice of black emancipation and a performer at the inauguration of Barack Obama.The former US secretary of state and Franklin took the stage last night at Philadelphia's Mann Music Centre in a rare duet. Their aim was to raise money for urban children and awareness for music and the arts.Their appearance in the three-hour concert before an estimated crowd of 8,000 overflowed with Franklin's catalogue of hits and arias from the world of opera and classical music."We decided to give it a try," Franklin said. "So here we are, in the city of Brotherly - and Sisterly - Love."Rice played piano while Franklin sang her hit I Say A Little Prayer as well as My Country, 'Tis of Thee. Earlier in the programme, Rice performed a selection from Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 20 in D Minor with the orchestra, a piece she said she practised furiously.Franklin even tickled the ivories a few times, including for a song from her new album A Woman Falling Out of Love, which will be released later this year. She also sang a duet - The Way We Were - with surprise guest Ronald Isley.The critics weren't convinced by the combination but applauded the cause. The Washington Post said putting the two together on the stage "had a kind of goofy brilliance". While Franklin still gives "a heck of a show", Rice's performance was more circumspect. "Her playing may have been a little foursquare, a little obedient, but that really wasn't the point," the paper said.The Philadelphia Inquirer felt that "history of a sort was in the making".Rice, it noted, was "diplomat first, pianist second", and this showed in her opening Mozart offering: "She wasn't able to voice effectively in the stormier middle section so that the more important material could be heard. On the whole it wasn't an artistic statement as much as an exercise in survival, and, heard from that point of view, she achieved what she set out to do."Rice got a nice, mostly polite reception, but after intermission, the star power intensified exponentially with the arrival of Aretha Franklin. Listeners roared, and she gave them what they came for - Respect, (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman, Think, and more," the Inquirer wrote.Rice has played with big names in the past, including cellist Yo-Yo Ma. But, she said this was "the first time I've played with an orchestra since I was 18."When she learned that Rice played classical music, Franklin sent for one of her recordings "to hear what she sounded like".Previously, she said, "all I had seen of Dr. Rice was in a political atmosphere. It just seemed foreign that she would be a classical pianist."Franklin was surprised."She really does play," Franklin said. "She's formidable."Aretha Franklinguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 18:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: agenda, respect,
1m ebook-seller
Author of Millennium trilogy beats James Patterson in race to join online retailer's new 'Kindle Million Club'The late Swedish journalist Stieg Larsson has beaten Stephenie Meyer and James Patterson to become the first author to sell more than one million ebooks on Amazon.The online retailer said yesterday that Larsson, author of the Millennium trilogy, had become the first member of its new "Kindle Million Club", for authors whose work has sold over a million copies in Amazon's Kindle store in the US. The crime novelist is likely to be joined by thriller writer Patterson - Amazon said last week that it had sold over 860,000 of his ebooks - while Twilight scribe Meyer, Sookie Stackhouse creator Charlaine Harris and queen of romantic suspense Nora Roberts have each sold more than 500,000 Kindle books in the US."Larsson's books have captivated millions of readers around the world and ignited a voracious interest in the lives of its main characters Lisbeth Salander and Michael Blomqvist," said Russ Grandinetti, vice president of Kindle content. "It's been exciting to have been a part of introducing so many people to these great books."The novelist's three books - The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played with Fire and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest - currently top Amazon's Kindle bestseller list, and are also in the top 10 bestselling Kindle books of all time, according to the retailer.The books have also topped Amazon's UK Kindle chart for "a good few months", said Iain Millar, marketing manager at Larsson's UK publisher Quercus, and are currently at the top of Waterstone's ebook bestseller list.But Millar said that UK ebook sales for Larsson were "nowhere near the million mark, which is indicative of the extent to which the US ebook market is ahead of ours"."Broadly, the print books are equally popular in the States and in the UK, but uptake of the electronic version is much higher there, primarily because a much higher proportion of book customers in the States own ebook devices," he said.Quercus has sold 3.3m copies of Larsson's books in the UK, and estimates that worldwide sales of the three novels are somewhere between 35-40m copies, "but they are literally selling too fast to count", said Millar.The news about Larsson's ebook sales follows Amazon's announcement last week that over the past three months it sold 143 Kindle books for every 100 hardback books. Kindle sales accelerated in the past month alone, when the online retailer said it sold 180 Kindle books for every 100 hardbacks. The figures cover Amazon's US book business, include hardback sales when there is no Kindle edition and exclude free Kindle books.The retailer made no mention of the proportion of paperback salesto Kindle sales, but founder Jeff Bezos stressed that ebooks were not cannibalising print, saying that hardback purchases at Amazon were still growing and that Kindles had overtaken them regardless.Stieg LarssonCrime booksFictionPublishingEbooksAmazon.comAlison Floodguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 18:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Author of Millennium trilogy beats James Patterson in race to join online retailer's new 'Kindle Million Club'The late Swedish journalist Stieg Larsson has beaten Stephenie Meyer and James Patterson to become the first author to sell more than one million ebooks on Amazon.The online retailer said yesterday that Larsson, author of the Millennium trilogy, had become the first member of its new "Kindle Million Club", for authors whose work has sold over a million copies in Amazon's Kindle store in the US. The crime novelist is likely to be joined by thriller writer Patterson - Amazon said last week that it had sold over 860,000 of his ebooks - while Twilight scribe Meyer, Sookie Stackhouse creator Charlaine Harris and queen of romantic suspense Nora Roberts have each sold more than 500,000 Kindle books in the US."Larsson's books have captivated millions of readers around the world and ignited a voracious interest in the lives of its main characters Lisbeth Salander and Michael Blomqvist," said Russ Grandinetti, vice president of Kindle content. "It's been exciting to have been a part of introducing so many people to these great books."The novelist's three books - The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played with Fire and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest - currently top Amazon's Kindle bestseller list, and are also in the top 10 bestselling Kindle books of all time, according to the retailer.The books have also topped Amazon's UK Kindle chart for "a good few months", said Iain Millar, marketing manager at Larsson's UK publisher Quercus, and are currently at the top of Waterstone's ebook bestseller list.But Millar said that UK ebook sales for Larsson were "nowhere near the million mark, which is indicative of the extent to which the US ebook market is ahead of ours"."Broadly, the print books are equally popular in the States and in the UK, but uptake of the electronic version is much higher there, primarily because a much higher proportion of book customers in the States own ebook devices," he said.Quercus has sold 3.3m copies of Larsson's books in the UK, and estimates that worldwide sales of the three novels are somewhere between 35-40m copies, "but they are literally selling too fast to count", said Millar.The news about Larsson's ebook sales follows Amazon's announcement last week that over the past three months it sold 143 Kindle books for every 100 hardback books. Kindle sales accelerated in the past month alone, when the online retailer said it sold 180 Kindle books for every 100 hardbacks. The figures cover Amazon's US book business, include hardback sales when there is no Kindle edition and exclude free Kindle books.The retailer made no mention of the proportion of paperback salesto Kindle sales, but founder Jeff Bezos stressed that ebooks were not cannibalising print, saying that hardback purchases at Amazon were still growing and that Kindles had overtaken them regardless.Stieg LarssonCrime booksFictionPublishingEbooksAmazon.comAlison Floodguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 18:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
Tags: 1m, ebook-seller,
It's curtains
The measures proposed by the Tory new breed will force our theatres to avoid artistic risks. We cannot allow this to happen, says Billy Elliot and The Pitmen Painters writer Lee HallBy any stretch of the imagination, British theatre since 1945 has gone through a golden age. Very rarely in world culture do conditions conspire to produce generation after generation of world-class talent. Harold Pinter, Peter Brook, the RSC, the National Theatre, the "powerhouse" of the English National Opera, the alternative theatre movement of the 1970s which quickly became the establishment of today; the endless stream of extraordinary actors, all the sirs and dames - to name only the most glittering prizes. Broadway is basically manned by British talent - at least half the shows are helmed by British directors.But it's not just the national institutions that produce work of an international reputation - my latest play, The Pitmen Painters, which is about to open on Broadway, was created in the 200-seat Live Theatre in Newcastle. There are no "stars" as such but I defy anyone to find a more talented group of actors anywhere. It's an extraordinary journey for those of us involved - but it is not exceptional. The point is, we have the richest theatrical culture anywhere in the world - always keen to renew itself, always producing someone to kick the lazy complacencies up the arse. And it stretches from the most glittering stars that Hollywood clamours to snaffle, to the hundreds of thousands of kids involved in community projects all over the country every week. The point is, it is a finely balanced ecology.We all know Germany, for instance, spends hugely more on its theatres, but literally nowhere has the range of work we have. I am currently working on a community opera in Bridlington, a commission for the National Theatre and a West End musical. The subsidised and the commercial blend into each other. It is incredibly hard to sustain a living as an actor, director or writer by simply working in the subsidised theatre. There are no fortunes to be had. Those practitioners who work solely doing community work or in the regional theatre on equity minimums do so because they have an immense commitment to sharing the transformative and empowering nature of the theatre. The hours are incredibly wearing, there is little glamour or vainglory, but the work is rich and rewarding; and everyone of us who works in theatre knows it is vitally important. Art is not an add-on, it never has been. It has always been central to our existence and understanding.The post-1945 consensus understood this completely. The need for municipal theatres, the need to fund the experimenters (who of course become the next establishment), the need for national institutions, the need to represent the rich diversity of our society - allowing a place where we can all become richer by including the excluded - was centrally important to the interventions made. But more than this, there was an implicit understanding that our greatest talent could not be nurtured without support. Don't forget it was two working class "Billy Elliots", Peter Hall and Trevor Nunn, who set up the RSC and the National. We must understand that these pillars of the establishment were achievements of the working class if we are going to really appreciate what is happening today.Not one commercial show is made without talent fostered in the subsidised sector. The dominance of British talent in musicals around the world, from Mamma Mia! to the Lloyd Webbers, have all been dependent on people who learned their craft writing, directing, designing and acting in tiny theatres for less than subsistence wages. Yet in VAT on the West End alone the government makes more than the entire subsidy to theatre. It is just economically illiterate not to understand that theatre effectively pays for itself many, many times over. The economic argument is unassailable. If you are trying to deal with a fiscal deficit, you do not cut off the hand that feeds you. So, clearly, something else is going on. I am not suggesting, by the way, that the Tories are not economically illiterate - their stubborn insistence on acting as if Keynes had never existed is a tragedy for us all. But that tragedy has a specific shape, and in this instance it comes in the shape of class war.This cabinet is completely different from any we have seen since 1945. These are not the sons of grocers who managed to ride the rails laid by the Butler Education Act. These are the sons of the elite. They're Eton boys. They didn't have to rely on state education; their grannies did not queue at the post office; they did not get their education from the local library; they were driven in private cars not public transport; their dads or uncles or grandads did not have to go on the sick. They simply have no idea of what benefits the welfare state has to offer. (We only have to witness Cameron's special pleading that he sends his kids to an NHS hospital to see the breach in experience he's trying to cover up.)Like all of us they can see there are inefficiencies and inequalities. Unlike us, they have no experience of how crucial the services are to everyday life. They can't possibly understand the fragile economy that allows the whole to function because of the support we give to the weakest links. They see the world purely in terms of ideology (even if it's woolly and homespun, rather than spelled out by Milton Friedman). They've never had their hands dirty even in the economic sphere; they aren't like the Thatcher generation, who at least had a modicum of experience in business. Do not be fooled - they are much more dangerous because they don't know what they don't know.The effects of the proposed 20-30% cuts in the arts are going to be devastating. Of course your old Etonians are always going have money to go to the opera, even if those opera companies are not going to be able to afford the kind of work that makes them world class. But theatres in the regions are not going to be able to afford to invest in the next play like The Pitmen Painters. The Live Theatre could barely afford to pay equity minimums to the cast on our first outing. But because it did have the money to take the risk it has paid huge dividends to the theatre. Clearly it's not all about producing commerical hits. It is about representing ourselves to each other. It is about channelling the immense creativity we foster as a society and finding an expression of it we can share. We do this better than anyone else, often against the odds. We really do have a flowering that happens incredibly rarely - it really is, as a whole, comparable to the Elizabethans or the Spanish Golden Age or mid-20th century New York. But it will cease to function if we do not preserve its very fragile ecology.What we will reap will be a moribund ruin. Sure, the mothers and fathers of the upper middle classes will be able to pay for their sons and daughters to go to drama school, or subsidise their internships. But the theatres they'll go to will not be able to afford to take any real artistic risks. Work like Nicholas Kent's at the Tricycle, which acts as a moral and political conscience, will inevitably be compromised; the new writers who would have been tomorrow's Alan Bleasdales or Caryl Churchills will remain unproduced. Maybe they will go into teaching, maybe they will be writing Holby City. But the working-class kids - black or white, male or female - are going to be written out of the picture. In particular, the regions are going to suffer badly. Already regional theatre is subsidised by those that work in it (because they take on other work, or by their partners who have "proper" - ie decently paid - jobs). The subsidised theatre is no gravy train - it's been cut for so long, deprived of money for staff - yet it is left with the legacy of huge buildings to run with barely a sou left over to actually put on work. We cannot afford to function if we cut back.I think what we are seeing is the end of a golden age - not simply for the theatre, but for much of what we've accepted as normal and civilised for 60 years. The assault on the welfare state isn't a neutral act of fiscal prudence. It is deeply unfair. They can afford a big society because it's us who are going have to pay for it. What must be challenged is the idea that this is simply an inevitable result of running a partially planned economy. Our grandparents did not accept this logic when they set up the welfare state and provided for municipal theatres and nationalised industries. They saw that the country was unequal and refused to accept it. They organised, out-argued, took on the self-interest of a class who have always bleated that they "meant no harm", "had no choice", "are doing the only thing to be done". It is not the only thing to do. Read your Keynes, read your Marx, read up on how and why the welfare state came about. Note how it came up from austerity and depression. Read about the Tories who were instrumental in bringing it about. This lot are of a different hue. Do not accept the ideological whitewash. These cuts are devastating, wrong-headed and, worse still, just the start. Nobody would argue we're not in a mess, but we cannot afford to accept this as a solution. We have far too much to lose.TheatreArts fundingArts policyLiberal-Conservative coalitionguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 18:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
The measures proposed by the Tory new breed will force our theatres to avoid artistic risks. We cannot allow this to happen, says Billy Elliot and The Pitmen Painters writer Lee HallBy any stretch of the imagination, British theatre since 1945 has gone through a golden age. Very rarely in world culture do conditions conspire to produce generation after generation of world-class talent. Harold Pinter, Peter Brook, the RSC, the National Theatre, the "powerhouse" of the English National Opera, the alternative theatre movement of the 1970s which quickly became the establishment of today; the endless stream of extraordinary actors, all the sirs and dames - to name only the most glittering prizes. Broadway is basically manned by British talent - at least half the shows are helmed by British directors.But it's not just the national institutions that produce work of an international reputation - my latest play, The Pitmen Painters, which is about to open on Broadway, was created in the 200-seat Live Theatre in Newcastle. There are no "stars" as such but I defy anyone to find a more talented group of actors anywhere. It's an extraordinary journey for those of us involved - but it is not exceptional. The point is, we have the richest theatrical culture anywhere in the world - always keen to renew itself, always producing someone to kick the lazy complacencies up the arse. And it stretches from the most glittering stars that Hollywood clamours to snaffle, to the hundreds of thousands of kids involved in community projects all over the country every week. The point is, it is a finely balanced ecology.We all know Germany, for instance, spends hugely more on its theatres, but literally nowhere has the range of work we have. I am currently working on a community opera in Bridlington, a commission for the National Theatre and a West End musical. The subsidised and the commercial blend into each other. It is incredibly hard to sustain a living as an actor, director or writer by simply working in the subsidised theatre. There are no fortunes to be had. Those practitioners who work solely doing community work or in the regional theatre on equity minimums do so because they have an immense commitment to sharing the transformative and empowering nature of the theatre. The hours are incredibly wearing, there is little glamour or vainglory, but the work is rich and rewarding; and everyone of us who works in theatre knows it is vitally important. Art is not an add-on, it never has been. It has always been central to our existence and understanding.The post-1945 consensus understood this completely. The need for municipal theatres, the need to fund the experimenters (who of course become the next establishment), the need for national institutions, the need to represent the rich diversity of our society - allowing a place where we can all become richer by including the excluded - was centrally important to the interventions made. But more than this, there was an implicit understanding that our greatest talent could not be nurtured without support. Don't forget it was two working class "Billy Elliots", Peter Hall and Trevor Nunn, who set up the RSC and the National. We must understand that these pillars of the establishment were achievements of the working class if we are going to really appreciate what is happening today.Not one commercial show is made without talent fostered in the subsidised sector. The dominance of British talent in musicals around the world, from Mamma Mia! to the Lloyd Webbers, have all been dependent on people who learned their craft writing, directing, designing and acting in tiny theatres for less than subsistence wages. Yet in VAT on the West End alone the government makes more than the entire subsidy to theatre. It is just economically illiterate not to understand that theatre effectively pays for itself many, many times over. The economic argument is unassailable. If you are trying to deal with a fiscal deficit, you do not cut off the hand that feeds you. So, clearly, something else is going on. I am not suggesting, by the way, that the Tories are not economically illiterate - their stubborn insistence on acting as if Keynes had never existed is a tragedy for us all. But that tragedy has a specific shape, and in this instance it comes in the shape of class war.This cabinet is completely different from any we have seen since 1945. These are not the sons of grocers who managed to ride the rails laid by the Butler Education Act. These are the sons of the elite. They're Eton boys. They didn't have to rely on state education; their grannies did not queue at the post office; they did not get their education from the local library; they were driven in private cars not public transport; their dads or uncles or grandads did not have to go on the sick. They simply have no idea of what benefits the welfare state has to offer. (We only have to witness Cameron's special pleading that he sends his kids to an NHS hospital to see the breach in experience he's trying to cover up.)Like all of us they can see there are inefficiencies and inequalities. Unlike us, they have no experience of how crucial the services are to everyday life. They can't possibly understand the fragile economy that allows the whole to function because of the support we give to the weakest links. They see the world purely in terms of ideology (even if it's woolly and homespun, rather than spelled out by Milton Friedman). They've never had their hands dirty even in the economic sphere; they aren't like the Thatcher generation, who at least had a modicum of experience in business. Do not be fooled - they are much more dangerous because they don't know what they don't know.The effects of the proposed 20-30% cuts in the arts are going to be devastating. Of course your old Etonians are always going have money to go to the opera, even if those opera companies are not going to be able to afford the kind of work that makes them world class. But theatres in the regions are not going to be able to afford to invest in the next play like The Pitmen Painters. The Live Theatre could barely afford to pay equity minimums to the cast on our first outing. But because it did have the money to take the risk it has paid huge dividends to the theatre. Clearly it's not all about producing commerical hits. It is about representing ourselves to each other. It is about channelling the immense creativity we foster as a society and finding an expression of it we can share. We do this better than anyone else, often against the odds. We really do have a flowering that happens incredibly rarely - it really is, as a whole, comparable to the Elizabethans or the Spanish Golden Age or mid-20th century New York. But it will cease to function if we do not preserve its very fragile ecology.What we will reap will be a moribund ruin. Sure, the mothers and fathers of the upper middle classes will be able to pay for their sons and daughters to go to drama school, or subsidise their internships. But the theatres they'll go to will not be able to afford to take any real artistic risks. Work like Nicholas Kent's at the Tricycle, which acts as a moral and political conscience, will inevitably be compromised; the new writers who would have been tomorrow's Alan Bleasdales or Caryl Churchills will remain unproduced. Maybe they will go into teaching, maybe they will be writing Holby City. But the working-class kids - black or white, male or female - are going to be written out of the picture. In particular, the regions are going to suffer badly. Already regional theatre is subsidised by those that work in it (because they take on other work, or by their partners who have "proper" - ie decently paid - jobs). The subsidised theatre is no gravy train - it's been cut for so long, deprived of money for staff - yet it is left with the legacy of huge buildings to run with barely a sou left over to actually put on work. We cannot afford to function if we cut back.I think what we are seeing is the end of a golden age - not simply for the theatre, but for much of what we've accepted as normal and civilised for 60 years. The assault on the welfare state isn't a neutral act of fiscal prudence. It is deeply unfair. They can afford a big society because it's us who are going have to pay for it. What must be challenged is the idea that this is simply an inevitable result of running a partially planned economy. Our grandparents did not accept this logic when they set up the welfare state and provided for municipal theatres and nationalised industries. They saw that the country was unequal and refused to accept it. They organised, out-argued, took on the self-interest of a class who have always bleated that they "meant no harm", "had no choice", "are doing the only thing to be done". It is not the only thing to do. Read your Keynes, read your Marx, read up on how and why the welfare state came about. Note how it came up from austerity and depression. Read about the Tories who were instrumental in bringing it about. This lot are of a different hue. Do not accept the ideological whitewash. These cuts are devastating, wrong-headed and, worse still, just the start. Nobody would argue we're not in a mess, but we cannot afford to accept this as a solution. We have far too much to lose.TheatreArts fundingArts policyLiberal-Conservative coalitionguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
Found on 07/28/2010, 18:00 h, Source: guardian.co.uk
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