Becca Brown of School of Rock Fame Easy Season 2 Episode 7

  • Paxman: Putting Up with Parkinson's, review: the glorious grump gives the disease a grilling

    The University Challenge presenter retained his characteristic no-nonsense attitude in this unsentimental documentary

    Jeremy Paxman was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in April 2021
  • Loretta Lynn's booze-soaked, broken-hearted blues changed America for good

    The country star's fearless songs about the Pill, motherhood and the Vietnam war got her banned from radio – but she wasn't easily silenced

  • The best classical CDs of August and September 2022

    The best new releases, from violinist Plamena Nikitassova's thrilling Biber sonatas to an ambitious double-album from pianist Igor Levit

  • 'We can't turn off the lights or the projector': inside UK culture's energy crisis

    Britain's theatres and cinemas can't go dark to save money. But soon they may not have a choice

  • An upbeat biography of Camilla, the hunting, horse-riding country girl who became a Queen

    Angela Levin's biography of the new Queen recalls how she was persecuted by the tabloids – and how Prince Andrew plotted against her

Comment and analysis

  • Meet the four candidates to play James Bond

    Barbara Broccoli has ruled out Idris Elba and Emily Blunt on account of age and gender. But a few rising stars could tick all her boxes

    If the suit fits: Regé-Jean Page
  • Barry Humphries' archive show brought back the thrill of twiddling knobs on the radio

    Most of us weren't born when Humphries's forgotten songs were recorded, but hearing them brought a nostalgic rush all the same

    Barry Humphries, photographed for The Daily Telegraph
  • John le CarrĂ©'s mistress's memoir made my mind boggle – and I, like her, was his audiobook abridger

    His other abridger ended up in bed with him. My memories are different: an M&S man in slacks, fleece and Clarks' shoes – who was a real gent

    Spy novelist John le Carré, pictured in 1965
  • Want to see Britishness in action? Watch this film

    Like all our greatest war films, The Sea Shall Not Have Them reminds us what kind of people we really are

    The horror, the horror: Dirk Bogarde in The Sea Shall Not Have Them (1954)

Reviews

  • Illuminations by Alan Moore review: strange tales from the Shakespeare of comics

    The comic book industry is 'sitting in a mess of its prolapsed intestines', rages the Watchmen author in his new collection of short stories

    Illuminations by Alan Moore review
  • An upbeat biography of Camilla, the hunting, horse-riding country girl who became a Queen

    Angela Levin's biography of the new Queen recalls how she was persecuted by the tabloids – and how Prince Andrew plotted against her

    Camilla, then Duchess of Cornwall, at the National Arboretum in 2020
  • They may not look like The Beatles – but golly, do they sound like them

    The Analogues are a Dutch quintet who do perfect live sonic recreations of the Fab Four. Their Abbey Road, at the Palladium, was pure magic

    The Analogues at the London Palladium
  • The Secret Heart, review: John le Carre's former mistress spills the beans in this lurid memoir

    Some of Suleika Dawson's writing is hilariously overblown, but she can be very sharp and funny

    John le Carré's former mistress, who goes by the name of Suleika Dawson, on a beach in Lesbos in 1983
  • Louis CK, review: His days at the summit of comedy feel long gone

    CK used to be an edgy comic in centrist dad's clothing. The garb remains, but the edge feels worn down at sold-out Hammersmith Apollo

    Comedian Louis CK
  • The journalist with whom Trump is most obsessed psychologically skewers him in her new book

    The ex-president hates the New York Times – yet he couldn't resist telling all to their reporter Maggie Haberman for her book Confidence Man

    In the spotlight: Donald Trump at a rally in Michigan, 2022

Behind the music

Rock's untold stories, from band-splitting feuds to the greatest performances of all time

Tonight's TV

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Screen Secrets

A regular series telling the stories behind film and TV's greatest hits – and most fascinating flops

  • Children's Laureate Joseph Coelho: 'Reading aloud to children will make them more successful adults'

    On the eve of National Poetry Day, the award-winning poet talks about the importance of verse for a healthy and happy life

    Man on a mission: Joseph Coelho believes everyone can learn to love poetry
  • Illuminations by Alan Moore review: strange tales from the Shakespeare of comics

    The comic book industry is 'sitting in a mess of its prolapsed intestines', rages the Watchmen author in his new collection of short stories

    Illuminations by Alan Moore review
  • An upbeat biography of Camilla, the hunting, horse-riding country girl who became a Queen

    Angela Levin's biography of the new Queen recalls how she was persecuted by the tabloids – and how Prince Andrew plotted against her

    Camilla, then Duchess of Cornwall, at the National Arboretum in 2020
  • The Secret Heart, review: John le Carre's former mistress spills the beans in this lurid memoir

    Some of Suleika Dawson's writing is hilariously overblown, but she can be very sharp and funny

    John le Carré's former mistress, who goes by the name of Suleika Dawson, on a beach in Lesbos in 1983
  • Welcome to a billion-dollar art sale that will go down in history

    The late Microsoft co-founder's collection is likely to become the highest-value single-owner sale ever

    Georges Seurat's Les Poseuses (petite version) is part of Paul Allen's collection and has a record-busting $100 million estimate
  • Think you know CĂ©zanne? This ravishing, revelatory show will make you think again

    Tate Modern's note-perfect new survey of the French pioneer strips away the received wisdom about him and invites us to consider him afresh

    The Basket of Apples, c 1893 (detail)
  • Take a tomb-crawl of England's weirdest country church monuments

    One photographer's odyssey through every rural church in the nation is yielding monumentally odd results

    What will survive of us: The monument in Bletchingley, Surrey is one of the finest of the early 18th century in the country. It depicts Sir Robert Clayton and his wife and their baby son Robert, who was born on 16 August 1665, but survived only a few hours.
  • Photographs of a lost England

    How Chris Killip captured a country in the throes of deindustrialisation – and created a different way of seeing

    Alone on a wide, wide sea: Simon being taken to sea for the first time since his father drowned, Skinningrove, North Yorkshire, 1983

In depth

More stories

  • Meet the four candidates to play James Bond

    Barbara Broccoli has ruled out Idris Elba and Emily Blunt on account of age and gender. But a few rising stars could tick all her boxes

    If the suit fits: Regé-Jean Page
  • What's on TV tonight: The Bear, Ralph & Katie and more

    Your complete guide to the week's television, films and sport, across terrestrial and digital platforms

    Jeremy Allen White as Carmen "Carmy" Berzatto in The Bear
  • Meet the Matildas: where are the original stars now?

    From Game of Thrones to Harvard University, five former child stars chat about what they've been up to since bagging the role of a lifetime

    Isobelle Molloy as Matilda
  • Children's Laureate Joseph Coelho: 'Reading aloud to children will make them more successful adults'

    On the eve of National Poetry Day, the award-winning poet talks about the importance of verse for a healthy and happy life

    Man on a mission: Joseph Coelho believes everyone can learn to love poetry
  • Barry Humphries' archive show brought back the thrill of twiddling knobs on the radio

    Most of us weren't born when Humphries's forgotten songs were recorded, but hearing them brought a nostalgic rush all the same

    Barry Humphries, photographed for The Daily Telegraph
  • The Bear, review: savour bite after bite of this masterclass in TV drama

    It's had the US critics drooling and the Emmy award panel on standby, but can this restaurant drama live up to the hype? You bet it can

    Jeremy Allen White as Carmen 'Carmy' Berzatto in The Bear
  • Paxman: Putting Up with Parkinson's, review: the glorious grump gives the disease a grilling

    The University Challenge presenter retained his characteristic no-nonsense attitude in this unsentimental documentary

    Jeremy Paxman was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in April 2021
  • Loretta Lynn's booze-soaked, broken-hearted blues changed America for good

    The country star's fearless songs about the Pill, motherhood and the Vietnam war got her banned from radio – but she wasn't easily silenced

    'I fight like a woman': Loretta Lynn in the 1970s

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Source: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/

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