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Australian musician appears in New Zealand court after raid at home in Tauranga on the North Island
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She doesn’t like Tony Abbott’s swimwear or policies, thinks Nigel Farage is frightening, loves Australia – mostly – and thinks Israel can be blind to its own faults. Anything else to add to the list?
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A troubled kid meets a professional dominatrix in a film that trades a potentially challenging hypothesis for a much more familiar path
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Author who blends DNA research with personal stories to examine how people inherit their family’s experiences says understanding how history has shaped you is empowering, writes Johanna Leggatt
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Cut Copy’s Melbourne snapshot, Argentine electro-folklore queen La Yegros and Jackie Onassis’s party music for heartbreak
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Oliver Wainwright: The 2020 Olympic stadium has faced two years of widespread criticism and budget cuts. Now prominent Japanese architect Arata Isozaki has launched a blistering attack on the designs
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The Chinese-born Australian artist tells <b>Monica Tan</b> about the day he was detained and later deported from Beijing for daring to make art about China today
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Fashionistas seem to think doing health goth is as easy as popping on a some black Lycra to dull the glare of white teeth at your local Fitness First, writes Myf Warhurst
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All the ingredients are there in this fresh serving of the period drama but only time will tell if this course improves with age
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A new integration of streams with sales purchases in the Aria charts may favour songs that are played multiple times by fans
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As the internet implodes over the Nirvana frontman’s ‘newly’ surfaced mixtape, Everett True hears from one of its original recipients about how it was really made
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Jonathan Jones: The self-righteousnessness of British museums stops them from returning masterpieces pillaged long ago to their rightful owners. It’s time they stopped hogging the world’s treasures
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Who would have thought that when Life on Earth first aired in 1979, it was a preview of the best 2014 had to offer, canine dinner parties and millinery notwithstanding
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Matthew Saville’s debut film is utterly compelling with Brendan Cowell in the role of his career as a tinnitus-afflicted officer, writes Luke Buckmaster
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Expect more cooking and renovation shows. Amanda Meade reports on what we’ll be watching – like it or not
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Horror film’s opening weekend in UK beats entire Australian run, but film-makers hopeful of word of mouth pick-up for DVD release
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Always on My Mind by the Pet Shop Boys has been voted the best ever cover song in a recent BBC census, which lists the best 50. So what did the listeners miss?
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Christos Tsiolkas has opened his new short story collection with a bang. But, Johanna Leggatt asks, is an explicit first page likely to turn off readers?
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Few things in this world make the average white Australian male as uncomfortable as the thought of dancing, writes Jack Kerr
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Watching a Survivor participant spear fish in their underwear is moderately more interesting than a choreographed Big Brother twerk, writes Jazz Twemlow
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They’re known as “comedy gold” – but are they? Really? Our critics cast an unsentimental eye over 12 from the hall of fame
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In response to Barry Spurr’s comments about Indigenous literature, Sandra Phillips says these books ‘astonish, perplex, and at times comfort the reader into re-imagining our relationships’
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How can Barry Humphries support freedom of speech for Barry Spurr when censorship is just fine for his international cabaret festival? Maeve Marsden withdraws her application
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It’s Time will be the soundtrack to countless remembrances of Gough’s life over the coming weeks – reminding us of the power of a good jingle and the artlessness of modern politics, writes Myf Warhurst
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Jazz Twemlow: Genitals are a fruitless (and blurry) gimmick in Channel Ten’s punishing new dating show where everyone’s in the buff
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Gotham looks impressive, says Jazz Twemlow, but do we really need a cast of hipster villains or to see yet another set of Wayne parents die?
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Jazz Twemlow hopes those disappointed by Blake’s breakup with Sam will remember falling in love isn’t easy, especially on national television
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Railing against everyday Muslims for the crimes of extremists is like screaming at kids kicking a ball because of your (justifiable) hatred of Fifa, as one SBS program shows
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Big Brother is founded on humiliation, yet it’s only when the abuse is made conspicuous that we kick up a fuss, writes Jazz Twemlow
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Depressing, isn’t it, that a TV show about a wizard in a phone box is doing a better job at digesting our fears than most newspapers, writes Jazz Twemlow
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Jazz Twemlow: The psychotropic nightmare of the BB house now has a fishbowl into which housemates are put, making them even more pitiable
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Jazz Twemlow finds little to celebrate in his six-month anniversary of wading through the stagnant pool of Australian reality television
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The subtext of the reality show’s latest biblical promo is terrifying, writes Jazz Twemlow – were the world to end, that Big Brother contestants would be the ones repopulating Earth
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Jazz Twemlow fears that with more contestants added, we could end up watching The Perpetual Bachelor: Till Blake’s Death Do Us Part
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Jiggling flesh in a serious look at our porn problem? You might as well run a health farm with face masks cut with heroin, writes Jazz Twemlow
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Time to get the popcorn out – politicians blurting out tosh bring drama, comedy and horror to the small screen, writes Jazz Twemlow
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While generating the next fake fairytale is all part of this show’s ‘journey’, Jazz Twemlow asks: does anyone watching care where it’s headed?
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Jazz Twemlow looks at the week in Australian TV, where it's the staid formulas, not the buildings, that are in need of renovation
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When it comes to age, fame-chasing doesn't discriminate, as contestants on The X Factor and The Voice Kids prove
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Jazz Twemlow looks at the week in Australian TV, where a timely documentary shows that the government’s environmental policy may as well just be the emoticon for a shrug
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Jazz Twemlow looks at the week in Australian TV, where the wheels fell off one reality show and another went hurtling in the race to the bottom
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Jazz Twemlow looks at the week in Australian TV, from Jack Bauer escaping terrorist-controlled drones to something even more frightening
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Matthew McConaughey stars in this colossal space adventure that is as visionary as Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, but not nearly so subversive, writes Peter Bradshaw
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A summer blockbuster exhibition reveals the role Australian art played in the most influential art movement of our time, writes Andrew Frost
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The latest from the Dardennes brothers stars the superb Marion Cotillard in an intimate drama with thriller-like intensity, writes Xan Brooks
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With years of radio-friendly singles under their belt, the Sydney electronic music duo finally release a hazy debut album, writes Doug Wallen
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Why do people take Taylor Swift so much more seriously than her peers? Great songs, smart turns of phrase and a noticeable lack of the usual hollow pop platitudes all help, writes Alexis Petridis
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Geoff Davis filmed his battle scenes on the family farm and cast his sons as leads in a film that falls down on its screenplay, writes Luke Buckmaster
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Bill Nighy, Imelda Staunton and George MacKay sparkle in this tale of lesbian and gay activists’ support for the miners’ strike, writes Mark Kermode
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The always seductive Mick Jagger led a Stones performance that was deliberate, entertaining and enthralling, writes Bob Gordon
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A new compilation charts how bands such as the Skyhooks, Sports and Daddy Cool were the cultural wing of the radical shifts that swept Australia in the 1970s
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Russell Brand’s desire to lead a global revolution is undermined by his smug, shallow manifesto, writes Nick Cohen
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This racy comedy doubles as a commentary on giving the public what they want and rubbing it in prudes’ faces
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Chinese teens sent to boot camp and af 29-year-old on a road trip to lose his virginity are among the stories covered in the fourth year of Sydney’s documentary film festival, writes Michael Safi
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Stage The Trouble With Harry review – Eugenia Falleni's story is compelling but crowded out
3 / 5 starsLachlan Philpott and cast resurrect the wider world of the woman who lived as a man in turn-of-the-century Sydney, but his central character gets lost in the process -
The men portrayed by Glenrowan playwright Margaret Hickey are simple creatures – but only on the surface, writes Rebecca Dargie
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While the press focuses on conservative politics and religion, David Williams amplifies a variety of Christian voices in this subtly devised verbatim show, writes Jane Howard
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TI’s ninth album features some surprises amid the catchy, ho-ridden singles, writes Kitty Empire
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The Brit award winner returns with an album of slowly building songs that, at their best, could give John Martyn a run for his money, writes Molloy Woodcraft
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Jason Bateman, Tina Fey and Adam Driver play the offspring of Jane Fonda, required to come home and remain there for a week after the death of their father. The performers excel, but the schmaltz can send a shiva down the spine
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JK Simmons stars in a study of musical obsession which brings the anarchic yearning for success familiar from sports to the world of the conservatoire
• Key films of Sundance – in pictures
• The Green Prince – first look review -
Annabel Crabb and dinner guest Bob Hawke serve up half an hour of bloke jokes and political banter – with a side of barramundi
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Two stories run in tandem: a young couple expecting a baby and a former child soldier as comfortable with a soccer ball as a gun, writes Alexandra Spring
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Ambitious vision, tragic themes and excellent performances combine in a piece of theatre as complex as the relationship between black and white Australia, writes Van Badham
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Swimmers in kaleidoscope waters prove a visual event for young theatregoers still learning the parameters of their own bodies, writes Van Badham
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Brown Cab theatre are at the top of their game crafting a show from an Indigenous source text with craft and originality, writes Van Badham
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Documentary uncovering the mysterious life and times of Maier, a nanny whose photographs bear comparison with Cartier-Bresson, writes Peter Bradshaw
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The casting of Sarandon as McCarthy's grandmother threatens to veer this road movie off-track, but when its star is safely behind the wheel – cruising guys and robbing stores – Tammy bowls along fine
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Julius Avery’s debut feature is slow in patches with wonky writing but is handsomely packaged and shows off his potential, writes Luke Buckmaster
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Ambitious drag theatre delivers a sense of playful glee, but lacks the precision to underpin its energy, writes Sara Fagir
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Scenes overlap in this Falk Richter and Anouk Van Dijk collaboration and the result is inarticulate confusion, writes Van Badham
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Jessie J has moved to Los Angeles and made an album with the US market seemingly very much in mind, writes Caroline Sullivan
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Catherine Shoard: Downey Jr defends estranged dad Robert Duvall in this tonally wobbly Toronto film festival opener also featuring Billy Bob Thornton as a diet Satan
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Neill has great comic timing and a scene-stealing sidekick in John Clarke for this jet-black comedy of Turkish-Greek relations
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Henry Barnes: Inspired by a hoax Gumtree ad, Kevin Smith’s bizarre imprisonment horror movie sees the director back to his snarky best
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Music Australian Chamber Orchestra / Tognetti review – persuasive experiments with Jonny Greenwood
4 / 5 starsRadiohead guitarist and composer Jonny Greenwood’s new work held its own alongside Haydn, Mozart and Tchaikovsky played by this exciting ensemble, writes Rian Evans -
Market demand has long softened the bite of contemporary art – as well the MCA’s annual exhibition of work from artists under 35, writes Andrew Frost
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Nikki Lane has the joint jumping with a barnstorming set while the Delines provide a languid contrast with elegiac tales of troubled souls
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Music Justin Townes Earle/Lindi Ortega review – heartbreak songs from Nashville's finest
3 / 5 starsMama’s boy Justin Townes Earle proves he’s his father’s son, while Dolly-esque Lindi Ortega is destined for headliner status -
This festival of new performance in a gutted department store offered audiences a taster of new talent along with their toasties, writes Jane Howard
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As Margaret Tuckson, artist’s wife and unlikely life model for his work, bequeaths 22 paintings to galleries across Australia, David Marr remembers her
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Documentary out this week tells remarkable story of Maier and the photographs she shot – and then deliberately kept secret
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The Kiwi actor who impressed in Boy is back with two new homegrown films. But will the building trade claim him before Hollywood does? Alexander Bisley meets him
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Enthusiasts travel miles to photograph faded hand-painted adverts for products and businesses that no longer exist - symbols of defiance against the city’s relentless progress
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Two decades after the double gold of Muriel’s Wedding and Priscilla, Australian film is having a moment. A soul-searching moment. What’s stopping audiences watching it in the cinema?
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The actors say they’re happy, the makers say it’s guilt-free – but what exactly is ‘fair trade’ porn? Zoe Williams finds out
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She shuns publicity and her identity is a mystery. Yet, as the last in her acclaimed series of novels about two friends in Naples is published, Elena Ferrante’s reputation is soaring, with Zadie Smith, James Wood and Jhumpa Lahiri among her fans. Meghan O’Rourke on a literary mystery
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In the 1960s, Walter Keane was feted for his sentimental portraits that sold by the million. But in fact, his wife Margaret was the artist, working in virtual slavery to maintain his success. She tells Jon Ronson her story, now the subject of a Tim Burton biopic
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From Soviet-era Russia to swinging 60s Soho, via Israel, Tokyo and Athens, tour the world from your own cinema seat, writes Anna Madeleine
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As a film about the scene’s 1970s heyday is released, Australians are keeping northern soul alive in the southern hemisphere, writes Pete Smith
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Books Peter Carey: 'Privacy should be a human right, but we've been tricked out of it – it's easy to give information away. It is sort of evil'
The Australian author talks to Luke Harding about surveillance and Julian Assange -
The 19th century ornithologist had a surprisingly progressive view of Australian animals, championing the fast-disappearing thylacine and broad-faced potoroo, writes Fred Ford – even if he also knew how to cook a wombat
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Adam Briggs thinks Australia is ready for a different voice as he brings his new album back to the small town that inspired it, writes Rob Boffard
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Paul Daley tells how he nearly walked away from his tale set in Canberra after one of his favourite authors came to town preaching against political fiction
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How was a widow from South Australia drawn into espionage, counterespionage and a 1952 visit to Moscow? David Horner explains in this exclusive extract from his new history of Asio
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Is Australia’s treatment of asylum seekers reconfiguring its national identify? Seton’s marble palm trees and lifejackets challenge the country’s image as an ‘island paradise’
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Suffering from Melbourne festival FOMO? Get a quick fix this Saturday with our jampacked guide to what’s on when. Yes, you may have to sneak out early a couple of times but it’ll be worth it.
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Part romantic comedy, part political drama, this new show from the star and makers of Offspring has some big boots to fill, writes Amanda Meade
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She’s yet to release an album and her style might borrow from grunge but there’s nothing Gen X about this singer’s self-motivation and her causes, writes Monica Tan
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This son of a Socceroos captain and brother to three seriously talented siblings has been flexing his funny muscles for years, discovers Monica Tan
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Australian Dylan and Chinese Lian embody for each other the good, the bad and the ugly of their respective nations in Sue Smith’s bold play, writes Monica Tan
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ABC’s hacking drama has been sold to the UK, US and Latin America before it even airs. Amanda Meade meets creator Shelley Birse who reveals her inspiration for the series
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Want to maximise your festival fun? Circle Saturday 20 September in the diary. You’ll need skates to zoom between venues, but it’s the day to experience the best of Brisbane, writes Alexandra Spring
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Some of the most memorable moments of the TV partnership of Margaret and David from the ABC's At The Movies
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Aussie Anthems: in the innocent days before the reality show craze, Popstars’ Bardot proved the popularity of on-the-fly television, writes Everett True
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They’ll be missed. Stratton’s long career gave him enviable knowledge and Pomeranz could strike to the core of a film
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The actor’s latest work, The Shadow King, subtly illustrates the destructive forces of mining on Aboriginal families, writes Monica Tan
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Jim Cummings, the American voice over actor is the voice of more characters than you can remember
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Take a sneak peek at Australia’s freshest choreographic talent rehearsing New Breed, Sydney Dance Company’s showcase of new contemporary dance at Carriageworks
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Five-piece psyche band Hookworms perform On Leaving at the Brudenell Social Club in Leeds
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The culture team are back from Melbourne to talk about the most intriguing shows of the festival and pick November's must-sees
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If the G20 is primarily an economic forum, what about the world it's held on?
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From a giant frying pan to a supersized slinky, the 109 sculptures lining the coastal walk between Sydney’s Bondi and Tamarama beaches may be the most kitsch selection yet
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News that Australia's opposition leader has done something 'progressive' and voiced support for marriage equality has the team from the Roast bringing out the Bill Shorten dancers
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Fashion duo Anna Plunkett and Luke Sales – better known as Romance Was Born – discuss the NGV's new gallery show for kids
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Circus dominates at this year's Melbourne festival, but there's no big top, tiger or ringmaster in sight. Nancy Groves reports
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The Victorian mums who disguised themselves as chairs, couches and curtains – to hold their children still for photographs
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Photographer Fabian Muir set out on a 10,000km journey of Australia to photograph the burqa in the country’s natural landscapes in his series, Blue Burqa in a Sunburnt Country
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Artist Jeff Makin climbs aboard as eight decorated art trams brighten up Melbourne's streets for the second year running
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From urban grasslands sprouting on the state library steps to Carsten Höller’s golden mirror carousel at NGV, the best of the art at Melbourne festival
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As John Bell announces his retirement from Bell Shakespeare, the company he founded to make Shakespeare accessible to all Australians, we take a look back at his long career treading the boards
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Scott Rankin and Trevor Jamieson discuss Hipbone Sticking Out, which covers thousands of years of Pilbara history, and the death in custody of John Pat, in a single performance
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The Roast team take on Ebola's place in Australia's collective consciousness, via the medium of a classic teen TV show
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A new exhibition at Sydney’s Museum of Contemporary Art brings together 29 Martu artists to present a series of works filled with vibrant colour
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Relive some of John Bell's greatest performances, from King Lear and Richard III to Faustus
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Comedian Josh Thomas attacks MP Bob Katter for his stance on homosexuality
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The Preatures' Izzy Manfredi and Jack Moffitt sit down to talk about how the band met, keeping a sense of mystery and the 'Medusa head' of modern celebrity
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From Indigenous cowboys and footballers to Sydney sunbathers and pieshops, the photos shortlisted for the 2014 Australian Life prize show a nation in technicolour – and transition
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With the 50th anniversary of Sydney’s Gladesville Bridge, we look at a number of historic and eye-catching bridges across the country
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Reading from his new book The Bush: Travels in the Heart of Australia, Don Watson profiles the jolly swagman of fact, fiction and song
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Cate Blanchett’s Oscars brooch and a record-breaking necklace designed for Nicole Kidman twinkle alongside Egyptian amulets and 3D design in Sydney
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Craigieburn Library in Hume, Victoria has been named public library of the year award following a cross-continent competition – here are nine more amazing library buildings across Australia
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Watch an exclusive clip from the acclaimed biopic of the Bletchley Park codebreaker
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Watch the trailer for a romantic drama, starring John Lithgow and Alfred Molina as a married couple forced to live apart after 40 years together
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Bonfire night marks the anniversary of Guy Fawkes’ failure to blow up the Houses of Parliament on 5 November 1605. This year’s celebrations included wild processions in Lewes and a tar barrel festival in Devon, along with other fireworks displays around the UK
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Peter Bradshaw explains why documentary film-maker Gianfranco Rosi's voyage around Rome's ring-road is worth your time this week
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For these unusual images, the notorious ambulance-chaser of New York City turned his lens on stars and high-society players, then doctored the pictures in his darkroom
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Queen Forever, a new compilation of the band’s music, features previously unreleased tracks from sessions dating back to 1981, including a duet between Freddie Mercury and Michael Jackson. Ahead of its release on 10 November, here are some images taken from that era
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An exhibition by two London galleries brings together a huge range of groundbreaking photographs, showcasing the work of acclaimed photographers including Brassai, Bruce Davidson and Robert Mapplethorpe
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As Tom Hanks announces that he is to publish a collection of short stories inspired by his love of typewriters, we remember some of the other writers who have cherished them, across the ages
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Assembly lines meet chorus lines in the new musical Made in Dagenham, starring Gemma Arterton and based on the hit British film. Go behind the scenes
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From barbershop signs made out of bloodied limbs, living mummies, and possessed drag acts, photographer Manuel Vason’s new book Double Exposures captures the artists pushing the boundaries of performance art
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After years of taking striking photos of Gypsies, the Czech photographer stood before the tanks during the 1968 invasion. He smuggled out his images, they went round the world and he fled to Britain. Here are his most poignant and powerful shots
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Jeff Stark's The Dreary Coast is staged on the Gowanus Canal, one of the most polluted waterways in Brooklyn. Take a tour of this interactive theatre piece, which incorporates elements of several Greek myths, Dante's Inferno and a smattering of other classical and modern references, in order to tell the story of Charon, the mythical boatman who ferries souls through Hades. Read our review of the performance
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The definitive photographer of the American west made his name with these photographs of California’s Yosemite Valley, currently on show at New York’s Met. The series inspired President Lincoln to sign a bill preserving the valley’s beauty and laying the foundations for the US National Park system
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Sylvie Guillem has announced that she will present her final dance programme at Sadler’s Wells in 2015. Revisit her journey from Parisian ballerina to global dance sensation
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Narrated by former Fugee Lauryn Hill, this documentary explores the liberation struggles across Africa in the 1960s and 70s, as colonial masters were overthrown
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Wild things roam free in this month’s Share your art project, with psychedelic wolves, whale karaoke and JMW Turner on safari in Bali
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From the opium trade routes of the 1900s to CND’s operations in the 1980s, maps reveal the political leylines of history – except when it comes to the holiday islands of San Serriffe, as a new British Library book reveals
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Telly addict Andrew Collins reviews House of Lies, The Missing, Scrotal Recall, Intruders and Life is Toff
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Dave Grohl is a man of many talents. He is also a prolific, inventive swearer. Between expletives, he tells Alexis Petridis about the Foo Fighters’ guest-laden new album – and why its accompanying TV series sees him jamming with Bad Brains and hanging with the US president
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Steve Rose: Like Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey Christopher Nolan’s epic unashamedly celebrates travelling to the stars as the next logical step in our evolution. Perhaps, after years of cynicism, we’re ready to be inspired by space exploration again
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Review Transmitting Andy Warhol review – white light and black angels in an immersive explosion
5 / 5 starsThe first major Andy Warhol exhibition in the north of England recreates the world of the Factory and the Exploding Plastic Inevitable – and Warhol is revealed in all his compassion and searing insight -
Despite little money, a dearth of promoters and the threat of police clampdowns, Tim Jonze discovers a thriving independent scene in the cities of Changsha and Wuhan
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Oscar contender Leviathan is a frank portrayal of corrupt Russia. In a rare interview, its director talks to Shaun Walker about his country’s ‘eternal curse’ and why voting there would be a ‘completely pointless step’
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With no publication angst and a killer work ethic, science students easily match their peers in the humanities in the art of creative writing. It even makes them better scientists, says novelist and teacher Aifric Campbell
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It’s another tumescent Guide Daily, your handy repository for you pop culture needs. Tunes, vids, trailers, and - today - more mawkish tweeness than your can hurl a fwuffy wittle kitten at. Get in touch with us @guideguardian or at that bit at the bottom of the page colloquially known as ‘the comments’. We’re here until 5.30, so turn on, tune in, and, erm, make yourself a brew or something
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A resident of Paris for 60 years, Klein’s photographs of 1950s New York caught the city’s energy and grit and made his name. He talks about returning to Brooklyn, working for Vogue – and being praised by Picasso
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Bonfire night marks the anniversary of Guy Fawkes’ failure to blow up the Houses of Parliament on 5 November 1605. This year’s celebrations included wild processions in Lewes and a tar barrel festival in Devon, along with other fireworks displays around the UK
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Originally published in the Guardian on 6 November 1976: ‘If people must really see X or AA films then I think they should not object to paying a little extra for the privilege’ - Richard Body MP
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An engagement announcement was posted in the Times, between Sherlock star Cumberbatch and Hunter, an actor and successful stage director
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Girls creator says she is ‘dismayed’ by interpretation of childhood behaviour, described in her memoir, as abuse
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Wellcome Collection’s exhibition on the history of forensics includes slides from Crippen case and a stabbed liver
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The veteran record producer talks about his key collaborations with Aretha Franklin, Whitney Houston, Bruce Springsteen and Alicia Keys – and his regrets for those he never signed
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Welcome to the Guide Daily, where we’ll be sharing the best news, links, tunes and vids. Today: Ariel Pink, the Daily Show and Michael Fassbender
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Imbalance unfair on taxpayers and lottery players elsewhere in UK, says culture select committee
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Marks discovered during extensive conservation were carved within months of Gunpowder Plot at great house in Sevenoaks for anticipated visit of James I
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Letters: On the same page is the story of John McArthur, who has been sanctioned by the DWP for declining to work unpaid for the same company which had laid him off
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Welcome to another Guide Daily where we’ll be crawling the curbs of pop culture once again. Stumbling upon various Girls and other metaphors that border on the unsavoury. Enjoy!
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‘I wrote Anna as my alter ego – and Miles stood for all the self-satisfied but charming men I fancied’
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We brought you news of career-defining Halloween costumes and a cure for Taylor Swift-itis
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TV star and owner of ‘gigantic’ house in London says he would face a ‘colossal tax aimed at foreigners’ if levy is introduced
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Surreal, mildly scary and with a vintage aesthetic, this will be equally popular with children and adults who buy artisanal pickles at the Brooklyn Flea Market
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Rhys Jones joins the likes of Andrew Lloyd Webber, Paul Daniels and Phil Collins by saying he’ll emigrate if Labour get in.
So is that a promise? -
Goths flock to the North Yorkshire seaside town for the popular twice-yearly music festival
Books Anzac and Gallipoli are the novelist's terrain as much as the historian's