The Hitchcock Players: Barbara Harris, Family Plot

THE HITCHCOCK PLAYERS: BARBARA HARRIS, FAMILY PLOT A 1960s Broadway darling reinvented as a Hitchcock blonde

A 1960s Broadway darling reinvented as a Hitchcock blonde

Alfred Hitchcock famously loved his blondes, and they didn't come much more lovable than Barbara Harris. A Broadway star during the 1960s who later shifted her attentions towards film, Harris was at the peak of her talent in Family Plot, a delightful if minor Hitchcock entry distinguished by a fine quartet of American leads (Karen Black, William Devane and Bruce Dern are the others) among whom Harris stands apart. Indeed, by the time of the conspiratorial wink from Harris that closes the film, audiences will surely find themselves already grinning right back.

CD: OM – Advaitic Songs

Spiritually slanted psychedelic minimalism that moves beyond rock

The sacred word 'om' is spoken in different ways according to its context. Elongated, it can be stretched over multiple syllables. As a musical unit, OM work with building blocks that are similarly minimal, yet drawn out for maximum effect. And like the origins of their name, their heady, psychedelic music is heavily indebted to cultures which lie to the east.

South Bank Show: The Male Dancer, Sky Arts 1

SOUTH BANK SHOW: Nureyev, Baryshnikov and Acosta make a superbly glamorous trio, but few new revelations

Nureyev, Baryshnikov and Acosta make a superbly glamorous trio, but few new revelations

Male dancers are a puzzle to British audiences, where they are an uncomplicated, taken-for-granted treasure in Latin or Slav countries. I point this out gratuitously, as it's a point that wasn't touched upon by Melvyn Bragg's film about three iconic men of ballet, Rudolf Nureyev, Mikhail Baryshnikov and Carlos Acosta.

Best Coast, O2 ABC2, Glasgow

BEST COAST: A fuzz-pop trip to the Golden State warms up the drizzliest of Glasgow evenings

A fuzz-pop trip to the Golden State to warm up the drizzliest of evenings

Best Coast has always been the quintessential California band, an identity the duo has embraced so fully that the artwork for their latest album features the bear that is the state’s mascot.

CD: The Beach Boys – That’s Why God Made the Radio

Despite its missteps, this joyless reunion yields a few gems

“We’re back together, easy money”. For anyone feeling a wee bit cynical about The Beach Boys' reunion, that lyric – from “Spring Vacation” – is likely to push them towards full-blown contempt. Although That’s Why God Made the Radio is defined by missteps, it’s worth persevering to the end.

CD: Van Halen - A Different Kind of Truth

The world's favourite hair-metal band proves a little too old for this kind of thing

Not many realise it, but Diamond Dave and the Van Halen brothers have actually been back together since 2007. It’s true they only actually managed one tour before Eddie was back in rehab. But, boy, by all accounts, what form they were in. So, now they’ve recorded a new album together, is it worth getting? The bad news is that no amount of wishful thinking can alter that, now in their fifties, these guys no longer really convince with their inimitable, high-octane slacker-rock.

Bombay Beach

Alma Har'el's indelible documentary reports from a faded Californian utopia

I can’t help thinking of Mad Men when watching the opening sequence of Alma Har’el’s marvellous documentary Bombay Beach. Newsreel footage from the 1950s excitedly trumpets the “miracle in the desert” of the Salton Sea, formed by accident when the Colorado River ran wild, and the heart of a development scheme that was to turn the area into “the recreational capital of the world”.