?Dancing,? which more than four million people have viewed on YouTube, is the online equivalent of a platinum hit, seeping from one computer to the next like a virus.
James Levine opened the Boston Symphony Orchestra?s summer season at Tanglewood with a concert performance of Berlioz?s biggest, meatiest and most hair-raisingly passionate score, the opera ?Les Troyens.?
?The Sister? is powered by the same sort of confidently rendered literary suspense that propelled Donna Tartt?s ?The Secret History? onto best-seller lists.
In the current spate of reality series there is no one for whom we might feel sorry, no one to hate, but a whole lot about which we might feel very bad.
a wide coalition of grassroots organizations -- including NOLAPS (New Orleans, Louisiana Palestine Solidarity); INCITE Women of Color Against Violence; New Orleans International Human Rights Film Festival; and the Third World Coalition of the American
Reality TV shows in which performers compete to become West End musical stars have led to record audience figures in London's theatreland. Progammes such as the BBC's Any Dream Will Do and How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria?, where contestants vied
Ivan Hewett reviews the Monteverdi Choir at St James's Church, the Spanish Place, London W1 This concert brought some of the best-known performers in Baroque music - John Eliot Gardiner and his Monteverdi Choir and English Baroque Soloists - into a
Michael Deacon reviews Duran Duran at the O2 Arena, London Duran Duran's singer Simon Le Bon may be 49, but he still has a way with women, although that's not the word he uses - he prefers 'ladies'. Or, to transcribe it more accurately, 'laydeez'. 'I'd
Geoffrey Norris reviews Ingrid Fliter at the Cheltenham Festival and Ailish Tynan/Ingrid Fliter at the City of London Festival The Cheltenham and City of London Festivals are both capitalising this year on the breadth of talent to be found in the BBC