Set in the s, it's a farce about some gangsters, but it's also a love story about a nightclub singer and a sailor. A lot of the critics and the theatre establishment didn't know quite what to make of it or what to do with it, so it was basically forgotten for 50 years.
The Union Theatre in Southwark is a really interesting fringe venue which rediscovers plays and musicals to reinvent them. Ace of Clubs might not be Noel Coward's best work, but what the team have done with it is brilliant, and it's charming to watch. They obviously had a really low budget but they've managed to stage a surprisingly lavish production.
This last album, and to a certain extent the one that came before it, very much represent a maturing of her creative voice. She's become much more outspoken. I absolutely love the strident feminist take in lots of her new songs, though I don't quite understand why it seems so radical in I love the message of the music and the fact that it's still brilliantly catchy, commercial pop music, yet there's this slightly more experimental production.
My favourite track is probably XO or Drunk in Love. I don't know how you'd categorise Privacy because it's so different.
It's like a cross between political theatre, verbatim theatre and interactive theatre, and it's about how much of your life people are able to access through your everyday activities online. It's almost like a presentation, but one that's theatrical. Funnily enough, political theatre and that kind of thing isn't usually my bag. In Privacy , they get audience members to press two or three buttons on their mobile phones and, before you know it, it shows you everywhere you've been in the last three months.
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Matthew Caine of Channel 4 News examines this use of neuroscience in a show-and-tell style that involves no science at all. Sceptics would prefer more insights into storytelling from screenwriting guru Robert McKee, writer Christopher Booker and director Gurinder Chadha. Did Caine really have to have three brain scans? Will he have more in the programmes on music and visual arts?
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