Iconic London music venue the 100 Club is set to close—but campaigners intend to fight to save it.
National Coal Mining Museum, Wakefield. Until 23 January 2011
High Society, at the Wellcome Institute in central London, charts the history of drug use—from 16th century books discussing the medicinal properties of marijuana plants to the era of prohibition in the US and the production of cocaine today.
Harold Pinter revolutionised British drama at the end of the 1950s.
Darkness On The Edge Of Town was Springsteen’s
This show recalls the background to John and Yoko Ono’s most radical album, Sometime In New York City.
The Red Stuff shop has an exciting range of new goodies, including the Ding, Dong, Thatcher’s Gone party pack and everything from socialist mugs to T-shirts and jewellery and a Lenin kitchen apron.
The hit Broadway musical about Nigerian musical legend and political radical Fela Kuti has just opened in London.
Jimmy McGovern is one of the few TV writers around today who brings the lives of ordinary people into our living room.
This unique play is the powerful true story of Lydia Besong.
The National Theatre is releasing a new programme of performances—filmed live in high definition and broadcast via satellite to the cinema.
Don Giovanni, first produced in 1787, tells the story of the incorrigible womaniser whose restless philandering lands him in hell. He is the aristocratic bully whose licentiousness is an expression of his male, feudal authority.