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The Review - Features
 
Charlie Musselwhite
Charlie's blowing up a storm for some justice

Blues legend Charlie Musselwhite is set to make a stand at the Jazz Café writes Richard Osley

CHARLIE Musselwhite, the celebrated blues harmonica player, is known more for his music than his politics. > more
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Theatre
PHAEDRA

Death and incest demand passion
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CAMDEN CRAWL

Queues, blues and ruined shoes ­ Yep, it's the Crawl
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SLITHER

Slither up the cinema aisle for a taste of freaky horror
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Charlie Chaplin Competition

19th Education Training & Careers Fair
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More FEATURES
 
A crop circle
Tales of the unexplained

Weird and wonderful happenings will be the subject of a conference organsied by cult magazine the Fortean Times.
Dan Carrier talks to its editor


ALIENS and unidentified flying objects. The Loch Ness Monster and Big Foot. Bizarre earthworks and oddly-shaped rocks. > more


Celebrating the voices which sang the changes - WILLARD White’s tribute to civil rights activist Paul Robeson heads an extraordinary celebration of... > more

What wouldn't you do for celebrity stardom? - A CONTROVERSIAL and shocking American black comedy, which touches on the national obsessions of... > more

A tale of two Kiplings - IF I’d been looking out of my window in the Spring of 1935 I might have seen a small man, top-hatted and probably dress-ed in black... > more

Haunting verse which holds us spellbound - POETRY brings you nearer and nearer to that crystal of light of an untold number of facets reflecting everything. > more

Escape into the landscape - COMMERCIAL illustration is a dying art. With computers and digital photography the need for an artist who can put together an image... > more

A community's photo album
- KILBURN in 1972 was a community facing rapid change. Massive new investment in the area – one of the poorest in London...> more

Who's that girl? - IN the early days of Doctor Who, when Patrick Troughton played the good doctor, he had a delectable sidekick called Samantha Briggs. > more

Did Falkender really write the Lavender list? - MY first impression of Harold Wilson was of a plump tabby cat, puffing... > more

A prophet and painter years ahead of her time - HILMA Klint described herself as an atom in the universe. But the revelations surrounding a series of...> more

The garden of delight for Bafta-winning Lia - URBAN and rural worlds collide in Shakespeare’s As You Like It as characters flee inner-city pressures into...> more

Laugh your head off, or have it lopped off - THE Duke of Edinburgh’s man servant walked out of the Cartoon Museum in Bloomsbury last week with....> more

Leigh and the art of ad hoc film-making - ACCLAIMED film and theatre director Mike Leigh gave his audience a... > more

Islamic art and the Jewish connoisseur - BUYING art is not an investment – it is about safeguarding cultural items for...> more

Kevin and Tom cook up Moore comic fun - For actor Kevin Bishop playing Dudley Moore on stage was a real eye-opener, writes Peter Gruner. > more

Tales by a Russian master - WHEN Clare Kitson started to publicise her book on film masterpiece The Tale of Tales, she knew she was up against it. > more

Drama as Gayle puts The Bard behind bars - Stage and screen star Gayle Hunnicutt is bringing Shakespeare to prison inmates around the country writes Gerald > more

Book festival open to all - It's Jewish Book Week and with over 50 events and a host of top names there's bound to be something for everyone, writes Dan Carrier > more

Betjeman's great defender - A N Wilson's biography of John Betjeman shows the late poet laureate as a product of his Highgate childhood, writes Jane Wright > more

Wanda’s building sight - GETTING caught in the traffic around the massive rebuilding at the King’s Cross development was the inspiration for a new exhibition > more

Chasing Rimbaud through our streets - WHO would have thought that in Camden there once lived in 1873 two great French poets > more

Generations join for a theatrical triumph - THE Tower Theatre Company, which was left in severe difficulties after losing its Islington home of more than 50 years > more

Playwright emerges from obscurity with a tale of incest – Playwright John Symonds has lived in relative obscurity in Hampstead for 40 years...> more
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