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LATEST PROGRAMME |
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TUESDAY 25 NOVEMBER
Presented by Mark Lawson
DH LAWRENCE AND WINSTON CHURCHILL
D H Lawrence and Winston Churchill were both enthusiastic painters, but were they any good? As two new books reproduce samples of their work, Mark Lawson and art critic William Fever give their verdict on the paintings of two men better known for achievements outside the artistic field.
D.H. Lawrence's Paintings is published by Chaucer Press, and Sir Winston Churchill's Life Through His Paintings is published by the Levinger Press.
Listen to the discussion
FROM TV TO STAGE
As a new stage version of After Miss Julie, based on a television play by Patrick Marber, opens in London, the playwright Brian Clark and author and broadcaster Humphrey Carpenter discuss plays that make the move from television to stage.
Patrick Marber's version of After Miss Julie opens tonight at the Donmar Warehouse in London and runs until February 7th
Listen to the discussion
THE SHAPE OF THINGS
Writer and critic Ellin Stein joins Mark Lawson to review The Shape of Things, a new film directed by Neil LaBute and based on his successful stage play.
The Shape of Things opens at selected cinemas on Friday, certificate 15
Related websites:
Listen to the review
ALL NEW TOP OF THE POPS
Mark Lawson talks to Andi Peters, former children's television presenter and now executive editor of Popular Music for the 91热爆. Can he get the long-running television music series Top Of The Pops with its new presenter, 22-year-old MTV front man, Tim Kash, back in the charts?
ALL NEW Top of the Pops launches with a live 1 hour show on Friday 28 November on 91热爆 One at 7pm
Related websites:
Listen to the interview
SELLING CULTURE
The Florida Grand Opera Company's posters for its new production of La Traviata use the line, 'Richard Gere took Julia Roberts to see it in the movie Pretty Woman and she loved it.' Catrina Michel, Head of Strategic Planning at the J Walter Thompson advertising agency in Manchester talks to Mark Lawson about the ever more imaginative campaigns to sell cultural products to the public.
Listen to the discussion
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