This magnificent two person play takes a fictional look at the last night of Martin Luther King’s life.
This acclaimed theatrical production of the inquest into the police killing of Jean Charles de Menezes at Stockwell tube station in 2005 is transferring to the Tricycle Theatre.
This exhibition is a small but important monument to one of the most significant struggles in Britain in the 20th century. It charts the history of the women’s suffrage movement from the setting up of the first groups in 1866 to their eventual victory in 1928.
Spanish director Pedro Almodovar’s new film Broken Embraces is a homage to his own cinematic influences, and the process and paraphernalia of film-making.
CLR James was a Marxist, anti-imperialist, pioneer of Pan-Africanism and author of one of the finest books ever written on cricket.
While New York at the end of the 1960s was a city electrified by political dissent, riots and cultural fusion, many second generation Peurto Ricans, like Bobby Marin, were busy combining an impromptu version of baseball with street corner crooning.
Daniel Barenboim is recognised as one of the greatest pianists and conductors alive.
"Why aren’t you all queuing up outside McDonald’s, Burger King and KFC if you all want a job so badly?"
I’ve always listened to the radio. It seemed closer, more intimate than television, and you could read or cook while it was on. It seemed freer, too, because soundscapes have no dimensions except the ones you imagine.
The exhibition "News From Nowhere revisited" examines William Morris’s visionary novel, News From Nowhere.
This film tells the story of the first half of Jacques Mesrine’s career as a gangster. However it runs into problems for a couple of reasons. Firstly, lack of plot.
This innovative exhibition shows eleven pieces of art jewellery created by members of the Manchester Jewellery Workshop. Each item is inspired by an article from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.