Sunday links
John Wyver writes: now more or less in its final form, here is another group of links to articles and videos that have engaged me over the past week. As always, my Twitter timeline is a wonderful source for these, more
John Wyver writes: now more or less in its final form, here is another group of links to articles and videos that have engaged me over the past week. As always, my Twitter timeline is a wonderful source for these, more
John Wyver writes: another selection of things that have caught my eye and engaged my attention over the past week - with my thanks, as ever, to all those in my Twitter feed and on FaceBook who make such interesting more
John Wyver writes: back to standard-issue links this week, and I'm determined not to lead with gloomy analyses of the world, but rather with a clutch of recommendations both for and about The Queen's Gambit (Netflix, above - a framegrab more
It's twenty-five years 25th since Matthew Bourne's Swan Lake first appeared on stage at Sadler's Wells on 9th November 1995, starring Adam Cooper as the Swan/Stranger and the late Scott Ambler as The Prince. In celebration of this anniversary, more
https://youtu.be/1AfNYztas2c https://youtu.be/ExPm_hJQYpQ Normal service will be resumed next week, after seven days that hopefully will be less exhausting, but unlikely to be more exhilarating, than the past seven. In the meantime there's lots of reading via:
moreJohn Wyver writes: on Sunday I posted the first part of a compendious list of 50 links to celebrate a century of Sunday links since we revamped the website; this is the second part with another more
Although he had expressed unacceptably misogynist views in a number of interviews, the passing of Sean Connery is a moment for sadness, and for admiration of an astonishing career. We are particularly fond of his appearance more
John Wyver writes: this is the one hundredth set of Sunday links since we over-hauled our website back in 2014. The feature took a number of forms before that, including 'Links for the weekend', and there was a long period more