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Haunting
verse which holds us spellbound
TS Eliot's ground-breaking poem
The Waste Land is as relevant today as when it was published
just after World War I, says Roger Lloyd Pack
POETRY brings you nearer and nearer to that crystal of light
of an untold number of facets reflecting everything. >
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Escape into
the landscape
Artist Michael Toohig is in
love with the great outdoors, writes Dan Carrier
COMMERCIAL illustration is a dying art. With computers and
digital photography the need for an artist who can put together
an image has diminished, a fact that means the traditional hand-to-mouth
existence of the artist continues into the present day. >
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A community's photo album
- KILBURN in 1972 was a community facing rapid change. Massive
new investment in the area one of the poorest in London...>
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Who's
that girl? - IN the early days of Doctor Who, when Patrick
Troughton played the good doctor, he had a delectable sidekick
called Samantha Briggs. >
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Did
Falkender really write the Lavender list? - MY first impression
of Harold Wilson was of a plump tabby cat, puffing... >
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A
prophet and painter years ahead of her time - HILMA Klint
described herself as an atom in the universe. But the revelations
surrounding a series of...>
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The
garden of delight for Bafta-winning Lia - URBAN and rural
worlds collide in Shakespeares As You Like It as characters
flee inner-city pressures into...>
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Laugh
your head off, or have it lopped off
- THE Duke of Edinburghs man servant walked out of
the Cartoon Museum in Bloomsbury last week with....>
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Leigh
and the art of ad hoc film-making - ACCLAIMED film and theatre
director Mike Leigh gave his audience a... >
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Islamic
art and the Jewish connoisseur - BUYING art is not an investment
it is about safeguarding cultural items for...>
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Kevin
and Tom cook up Moore comic fun - For actor Kevin Bishop
playing Dudley Moore on stage was a real eye-opener, writes
Peter Gruner. >
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Tales
by a Russian master - WHEN Clare Kitson started to publicise
her book on film masterpiece The Tale of Tales, she knew she
was up against it. >
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Drama
as Gayle puts The Bard behind bars - Stage and screen star
Gayle Hunnicutt is bringing Shakespeare to prison inmates around
the country writes Gerald >
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Book
festival open to all - It's Jewish Book Week and with over
50 events and a host of top names there's bound to be something
for everyone, writes Dan Carrier >
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Betjeman's
great defender - A N Wilson's biography of John Betjeman
shows the late poet laureate as a product of his Highgate childhood,
writes Jane Wright >
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Wandas
building sight - GETTING caught in the traffic around the
massive rebuilding at the Kings Cross development was
the inspiration for a new exhibition >
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Chasing
Rimbaud through our streets - WHO would have thought that
in Camden there once lived in 1873 two great French poets >
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Generations
join for a theatrical triumph - THE Tower
Theatre Company, which was left in severe difficulties after
losing its Islington home of more than 50 years >
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Playwright
emerges from obscurity with a tale of incest
Playwright John Symonds has lived in relative obscurity in Hampstead
for 40 years...>
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