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Life&Style

  • Weekly Grill: Indian chef extraordinaire Vivek Singh tells us about his City restaurant turning 10 and memories of lamb cooked over cowpats

    October 2, 2018

    Who are you? I’m the founding chef at Cinnamon Collection. Our group has been revolutionising Indian Dining since 2001, with The Cinnamon Club in Westminster, Cinnamon Kitchens in the City, Oxford and Battersea and the magical Cinnamon Bazaar in Covent Garden. What do you do? I dream up dishes. What’s new at Cinnamon Group? Lots! [...]

  • The drinks master: There’s more to champagne than big names, try some grower-producers

    October 2, 2018

    The Grand Marques, or big houses, in Champagne have always dominated the market. With their bulging marketing budgets, they are able to place their names everywhere from billboards, to sponsorships at major sporting events, to having their names elegantly etched into bars and restaurants all over the world. Most big Champagne houses are négociants, which [...]

  • The Brolly and the Ivy: New Ivy restaurant prepares to open in Canary Wharf with heist-themed launch

    October 2, 2018

    The latest instalment of Richard Caring’s Ivy Collection has opened for bookings, marked by a theatrical dance stunt themed around heist film The Thomas Crown Affair. Actors in bowler hats twirled umbrellas and danced to mark the upcoming launch of The Ivy in The Park, a new all-day dining brasserie at Canada Square, Canary Wharf, [...]

  • Golden Ferrari goes on sale in first gold-themed auction at Sotheby’s

    October 1, 2018

    A golden Ferrari is expected to sell for up to £450,000 as it goes on sale later this month at auction house Sotheby’s. The 1977 Ferrari 512 BB, which has three previous owners, will be sold at the world’s first auction dedicated entirely to gold. When bought by its most recent owner in 1997 the [...]

  • Bored of Bora Bora? Set sail to the islands of Rangiroa, Moorea, and Tahiti to discover the real French Polynesia

    September 28, 2018

    French Polynesia is the archetypal island paradise. A place of such astounding natural beauty that superlatives fail from overuse. This French overseas territory sits in the heart of the South Pacific, at the centre of the Polynesian-triangle; roughly equidistant between Hawaii, Easter Island, and New Zealand. It consists of five culturally and geographically diverse island [...]

  • Eyam at Shakespeare’s Globe is an impressive, emotionally draining play about accepting death

    September 28, 2018

    Shakespeare's Globe, until 13 Oct RECOMMENDED It’s the 17th century, and the people of the plague-struck Derbyshire village of Eyam have made a noble decision to quarantine themselves, rather than risk the illness spreading to neighbouring settlements. By the time the pestilence has ended, three-quarters of the villagers will be dead. Directed by Adele Thomas [...]

  • Poet in Da Corner at the Royal Court is the world’s first grime musical and it’s brilliant

    September 28, 2018

    Royal Court, until 6 Oct UNMISSABLE Grime has come a long way in the past few years. Formed from a crucible of garage, jungle and dancehall music, it was until recently an entirely underground genre, mentioned by the press only in the context of rising knife crime. But at some point a broader audience started [...]

  • Antony and Cleopatra at the Olivier is a wonderfully acted epic that outstays its welcome

    September 28, 2018

    National Theatre's Olivier, until 19 Jan RECOMMENDED Shakespeare’s plays tend to be reviewed on the strength of the production rather than the quality of the text, which is taken as a given. But the problems with this otherwise brilliant National Theatre show are all of the bard’s making. There’s a reason, after all, why Antony [...]

  • Francis Upritchard: Wetwang Slack at the Barbican is a a wry commentary on our fetishisation of historical objects

    September 28, 2018

    Barbican Curve Gallery, until 6 Jan RECOMMENDED Bringing together dozens of multi-disciplinary works by New Zealander Francis Upritchard, Wetwang Slack is a wry commentary on our curation – and fetishisation – of historical objects. His delicate, slightly grotesque sculptures are presented as if they were museum pieces, perched upon plinths or lining glass cabinets. There’s a [...]

  • Space Shifters at the Hayward Gallery is an unmissable exhibition that will make you question your senses

    September 28, 2018

    Hayward Gallery, until 6 Jan UNMISSABLE Art isn’t generally the kind of thing you can ‘spoil’. Someone telling you about the Guernica before you see it doesn’t detract from your appreciation of it – quite the contrary: the more you know, the more powerful it becomes. But I feel I should include a spoiler warning [...]

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