Heading Out | Little Yemen | Time Travelling Kids: American slavery to Cheshire child labour | Beasts of the Southern Wild
This new show at London’s National Portrait Gallery brings together some of the most iconic photographs taken by Man Ray.
In 1906 Wilhelm Voigt, a cobbler just out of prison, dressed up in a captain’s uniform, commandeered ten soldiers and marched on Köpenick Town Hall, south east of Berlin.
Gordon Brown inspired this MI5 drama in 2009, when he said the British state did not engage in torture.
It is a happy coincidence that Manet, Portraying Life opened as the musical based on Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables is on in cinemas across Britain.
How do you overthrow one of the world’s most notorious military dictatorships? For Chilean director Pablo Larrain, the answer seems to be with the power of happiness.
Fifty years ago this month the Beatles recorded their iconic album, Please Please Me.
This is the first of three short stories to mark the centenary of the birth of Rosa Parks.
The Young Fathers are a hip hop trio hailing from Edinburgh.
There’s a reason why over 60 million people have seen the musical version of Victor Hugo’s novel Les Miserables at the theatre. It’s a story about love and loss but also hope and rebellion.
Set in the early 1930s, this five part drama opens with a black man, Louis Lester (Chiwetel Ejiofor), in immaculate evening dress sidling into a club.