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GORDON Brown will be portrayed as 'obsessive and paranoid' in a new show about his ill-fated spell as Prime Minister
A shy child with his nose permanently stuck in a book, Neil Gaiman grew up to become a publishing phenomenon writing scripts, graphic novels and fiction.
A structure which existed for just one night is one of 12 new buildings to be named the best in Scotland.
Well, not quite. My childhood in Argyll was, mercifully, rather less demented than Iain Bank's tale of Frank Cauldhame. Set along an unidentified coastline in the 1980s, near the fictional town of Porteneil, the transposition of Iain Banks' first novel to the area in which I grew up was beguilingly easy. Strung along the west coast of Knapdale in Argyll, the paps of Jura jutting out of the water, the community and the landscape populated Banks' narrative with familiar faces, erecting Frank's Sacrifice Poles on beaches I knew, in dead woods I hurried through. For his home, I recruited an unfortunate neighbour's house, bleached white.
THE Scottish Fashion Awards will take place in London for the first time this year. The annual event, which celebrates leading Scottish fashion talent, will be held at historic Georgian mansion Dover House in Whitehall and be hosted by Secretary of State for Scotland Michael Moore MP, as well as awards founder Dr Tessa Hartmann.
There was a glorious informality to this major restaging of the oldest known play in Scotland's dramatic history, presented as part of a major research project involving the Arts and Humanities Research Council, Edinburgh University and Historic Scotland.
HEADLINERS Basement Jaxx bring the house down as they close the first day of RockNess — after 30,000 thrilled fans partied in the sunshine
Welcome to the programme of events, a most impressive collection of Britain’s finest touring theatre, music, workshops and art exhibitions brought to your doorstep.
The Edinburgh People’s Festival, now in its 12th year, is about to embark on its most ambitious project yet; making a film depicting the reality behind Britain’s 2nd richest city.
This joint programme is for writers interested in both mapping and making Scottish literature.
A DISINTIGRATING tiled Glasgow hallway, films about colonialism and freedom, and a new dance work from leading Scottish ballet director Michael Clark have been unveiled as Scotland's weighty contribution to the world's biggest art festival.
There is something astonishing about this rare double bill of short plays by Caryl Churchill, if only to get some kind of insight into how the mind of this most singular of writers works.
PLANS for a film and television studio to be built in Glasgow are under discussion, with a task force established to bring the long-mooted project to fruition.
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PRODUCERS of one of TV's most popular shows, Game of Thrones, considered shooting the hit series in Scotland but were unable to do so because of a lack of quality studio space.
Gigs include his first visit to Blackpool, dates at Glasgow's Clyde Auditorium – and a return to the Royal Albert Hall in London.
The dates of the upcoming shows are: 18, 19, 20 November – Glasgow; 22, 23, 24 November – Blackpool; 26, 27, 28 November – London. Tickets go on sale on 14 June, click here for more information.
A DARING and controversial play partly inspired by the Jimmy Savile scandal, Hollywood actor Alan Cumming’s one-man version of Macbeth and Taggart star Blythe Duff’s portayal of a husband killer have all been honoured at the Scottish theatre “Oscars”.
The Playlist call it the “the Welsh movie fans have been waiting for since 1996.”
James McAvoy leads the picture as Bruce Robertson, a sex-obsessed, cocaine-addicted, bigoted Scottish police officer who is supposed to be investigating a murder but gets sidetracked by his own various vices.
[Warning: this trailer is definitely not safe for work!]
HE WAS one of Scotland’s seminal modern authors, whose work straddled genres, and was adapted to stage, radio and both the big and small screens.
‘There is no place more revolutionary and no time more exciting than right here and right now in Scotland,’ writes Andrew Redmond Barr of the National Collective, a congregation of artists in favour of Scottish independence. The finest minds of our generation, to borrow from Allen Ginsberg’s Howl, are poised to reimagine Scotland from top to bottom: politically, economically, socially and culturally. The summer of 2014 – dare we call it the Summer of Independence? – could be to Scotland what 1967 was to London and San Francisco, its artists and radicals conjuring songs, essays, poems, speeches and plays which offer fresh vistas and challenge a hideously conservative status quo. This process was spurred at the end of 2012 with the book Unstated: Scottish Writers on Independence, edited by Scott Hames, which featured essays by 27 writers, almost all of whom are in favour of Home Rule.
Ambitious proposals to market Perth and Kinross as an events destination could provide the area with an £8 million boost.
JAPAN AND SCOTLAND HAVE QUITE A BIT IN COMMON, WHEN YOU THINK ABOUT IT. A SMALL ISLAND NATION SITTING OFF THE EDGE OF A BIGGER CONTINENT. A PROUD NATIONAL HERITAGE OF INNOVATION, ENGINEERING AND MANUFACTURE. NOT VERY GOOD AT FOOTBALL. RAIN. AND BOTH NATIONS HAVE BEEN PUTTING THEIR OVER-AVERAGE RAINFALL TO GOOD USE, MAKING EXCELLENT MALT WHISKIES. SCOTLAND'S SITUATION AT THE VERY TOP OF WHISKY-PRODUCING NATIONS IS VERY SECURE*, SO IT SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED UN-PATRIOTIC TO REGARD WHAT OTHER COUNTRIES ARE UP TO, AND TO CONSIDER HOW THEIR MALTS COMPARE. IN FACT, AS THE MOST SOPHISTICATED WHISKY-DISTILLING AND -DRINKING NATION IN THE WORLD, YOU COULD SAY IT'S OUR DUTY...
Lang syne acceptit as a ‘language’ by the Scottish an UK parliaments, oor heidmaist spoken minority leid aye has a want o status or e’en visability in education, the prent press (ootside o cartoons), in braidcastin, academia, science or in onie ither mensefu area.
Tho remainin a near ‘secret tongue’ Scots is spoken yet by hunders o thoosands o Scots. The census nummers will nae doot prove Scots is uised bi monie times the amoot of fowk spaekin Scotland’s ither minoritie leid, Gaelic.
The future of Scottish popular music is in safe hands.
If Perth Festival wanted to showcase the quality of our songwriting and live performance, the choices were spot on.
As the curtain falls, Jacques Brel's own voice gravels out, jaunty but husked with the grit of experience.
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