CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: It's impossible that anyone, least of all the vain monarch, ever looked at Cromwell and thought, 'In 500 years that bloke is going to be a sex symbol.'
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: You'll never want to turn left again. Economy might be cramped, noisy and depressing, but at least the crew aren't actively trying to murder you
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Opinion polls are obsolete. Focus groups are irrelevant. If you want to know what people are really thinking about, take a look at television viewing figures.
For those theatergoers of a certain age, watching how the New York Times
The final episode of Steven Knight's "love letter to Birmingham and Coventry" airs tonight
Directed and choreographed by Justin Peck, the show previously played an
After forming a one-off criminal gang, Stevens and co come to regret kidnapping a gangster’s daughter – played by Matilda star Alisha WeirFew actors appear to derive such lip-smacking relish from the job as former Downton Abbey star Dan Stevens. The bigger the performance, the greater the gusto with which he sinks his teeth into the role. And if a bit of scenery gets chewed along the way, well, that’s just collateral damage. As sneering and sadistic criminal Frank, Stevens is one of several...
Creator Steven Knight described the BBC series as a 'love letter to Coventry and Birmingham'
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Always read the small print. Everybody knows it and nobody ever does - when you're young, you can't be bothered, and when you're old, you can't find your reading glasses.
“Illinoise,” a hallucinatory dance musical based on Sufjan Stevens' 2005 concept album “Illinois,” offers a fitting end to a Broadway season that seemed happiest when operating beyond conventional assumptions and practices. Whether the piece — I hesitate to call this delicate hybrid a show — is more dance than musical is not all that important. Let the theater award categories stretch to accommodate new forms and visions. The production, which was at the Park Avenue Armory earlier this season,...
Co-written with Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Jackie Sibblies Drury, the dance musical is a transcendent distillation of youth in all its pain and glory.
Stephen Lawrence, 18, an aspiring architect, was murdered on his way home in an unprovoked attack by a gang of racists in Eltham, south-east London, in April 1993.