The Week UK – 23 August 2019

(Steven Felgate) #1
33

24 August 2019 THE WEEK

The List

Last chance
Lee Krasner: Living Colourat the Barbican,
London EC2 (barbican.org.uk).Aretrospective
for one of the 20th century’s great expressionist
artists, who was often eclipsed by her marriage
to Jackson Pollock. Ends1September.

Showing now
Kiss Me, Kateat the Watermill Theatre,
Newbury, Berkshire (watermill.org.uk). With
its Cole Porter score and choreography by
Strictly’s Oti Mabuse, this romantic musical
comedy about the theatre is “a joy” (Times).
Ends 21 September.

Cut &Paste: 400 Years of Collageat the
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art,
Edinburgh (nationalgalleries.org). This
“digressive, wry and surprising” exhibition tells
the story of collage from 18th century “paper-
mosaicks” to Peter Blake, via Picasso and Fuzzy-
Felt (Sunday Times). Ends 27 October.

The Doctorat the Almeida Theatre, London
N1 (almeida.co.uk). Robert Icke writes and
directs his final play as the Almeida’s associate

director. Juliet Stevenson stars in this very loose
adaptation ofProfessor Bernhardi,Arthur
Schnitzler’s 1912 comedy, which explores anti-
Semitism in Austria. Ends 28 September.

Just out in paperback
21 Lessons for the 21st Centuryby Yuval
Noah Harari (Vintage £9.99). TheSapiens
author’s latest, “a self-help manual for
mankind”, has had mixed reviews, but the
lessons themselves are “illuminating” (Times).

The Alexiadby Anna
Komnene (Penguin £16.99). A
history written byaByzantine
princess in Constantinople in
the 12th century. Sparkling,
witty andadelight from start
to finish.Ispent days, weeks
and years studying this text
–and found something new
each timeIread it.

Fathers and Sonsby Ivan
Turgenev, 1862 (OUP £7.99).
Turgenev is one of my
favourite novelists, and
Bazarov one of my favourite
characters.Iread this when
Iwas 15 and it madeabig
impression on me. It opened
anew world of activism,
nihilism and, above all,alife-
long love of Russia and
Russian literature.

The Fall of Rome and the
End of Civilizationby Bryan
Ward-Perkins, 2006 (OUP
£12.99).Agem ofabook that
Ialso return to time and again.
Most scholars don’t think too
much about what happened in
Western Europe in the
centuries that followed the fall
of Rome–but this account is
brilliant, informative and witty.
History writing and first-class
scholarship at their best.

Commodity and Exchange
in the Mongol Empireby
Thomas T. Allsen, 1997 (CUP
£29.99). This did more
than perhaps any other book
to change my ideas about
the past. Far from being the
violent hordes of popular
imagination, the Mongols were

in fact highly sophisticated and
impressive empire-builders.
Allsen, who died recently, was
agenius.

Home Fireby Kamila
Shamsie, 2017 (Bloomsbury
£8.99). Shamsie is a
breathtakingly good author. I
love her work.Home Fireis a
cracker ofanovel, reworking
the story ofAntigonein a
contemporary context.

Wisden Cricketers’
Almanackedited by Lawrence
Booth (Wisden £55). I’ve
always loved playing and
reading about cricket. IfIhad
time, I’d spend days reading
Wisden each year. I’m
determined to make an
appearance in it one day.

Best books... Peter Frankopan
The writer and historian picks his six favourite books. His latest,The New
Silk Roads(Bloomsbury £8.99)–the follow-up to 2015’s prizewinning
The Silk Roads(Bloomsbury £11.89)–isout now in paperback.

The Week’s guide to what’s worth seeing and reading

Juliet Stevenson in The Doctor

Television
Programmes
Peaky BlindersThe Shelby
family is back forafifth series
of the hugely popular period
gangster drama, with Cillian
Murphy and Helen McCrory.
Sun 25 Aug, 21:00; with
episode2onMon 26 Aug,
21:30; BBC1 (60mins).

ABlack and White Killing:
The Case that Shook
AmericaThe story of Larnell
Bruce, whose murder by a
white supremacist in 2016 was
captured on CCTV footage that
went viral. In this two-part
documentary, Bafta-winning
journalist Mobeen Azhar
unpicks events from every
angle. Sun 25 Aug, BBC2
21:00 (60mins).

SanditonJane Austen’s final,
unfinished novel gets the
Andrew Davies treatment in
ITV’s new eight-parter. Young
Charlotte Heywood arrives in
the fishing village of Sanditon,
and is soon being courted. Sun
25 Aug, ITV1 21:00 (60mins).

The Great British Bake Off
It’s that time of year again, as
13 hopeful amateur bakers
compete for their place in the
big white tent. Tue 27 Aug, C4
21:00 (90mins).

China:ANew World Order
Three-part documentary
charting the extraordinary rise
and controversial rule of Xi
Jinping. Thur 29 Aug, BBC2
21:00 (60mins).

Films
Viceroy’s House(2017)
Gurinder Chadha directs this
lavish Partition drama starring
Hugh Bonneville as Lord
Mountbatten, India’s last
viceroy. Sat 24 Aug, BBC2
21:00 (105mins).

Sing Street(2016) Boy
meets girl (and startsaband)
in this coming-of-age story set
in 1980s Dublin. Mon 26 Aug,
Film4 23:40 (130mins).

Titles in print are available from The Week Bookshop on 020-3176 3835. For out-of-print books visit biblio.co.uk

New to Sky
SuccessionThe “clever and
vicious” drama aboutamedia
dynasty returns forasecond
season, offering “the blackest
of black humour” (Guardian).
With Matthew Macfadyen and
Brian Cox. On Sky Atlantic.

BrassicNew comedy about
agroup of Northern working-
class friends, withafocus on
mental health. Co-created by
This Is England’s Joe Gilgun,
who also stars. On Sky One.

The Archers:what happened last week
Still hurt after her clash with Clarrie, Susan tries to coax Emma out of her room, to no avail. Shula
tells Freddie and Kenton about her interview for ordainment. To Lynda’s horror, Tracy ends up
getting the receptionist job at Grey Gables. Tracy succeeds in getting Emma out forawalk, and
they bump into Will. Later, Emma drops in some lotion for Poppy’s suspected chickenpox and Will
confesses to feeling guilty about Ed’s job loss. Emma says she doesn’t hold it against him. Jazzer
admits to Jim and Alistair that he’s been talking to Harrison about Jim’s plight, to Jim’s distress.
Susan and Clarrie’s row spills over into work, with Helen having to intervene. Will rushes Poppy to
A&E. Kate and Jakob unwittingly end up onadate, arranged by Alice. Tracy plansagirls’ night to
cheer Emma up, but achieves the opposite. Jazzer consults Shula in his continuing efforts to seek
justice, making Shula late for her ordination interview. Susan is angered by the news of Ed’s new
job, and on the verge of taking action she is stopped by Neil, who offersafew home truths.
©J


ONATHAN RING; MANUEL HARLAN

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