Question and answer interviews

theartsdesk Q&A: Novelist Hilary Mantel

THE ARTS DESK Q&A: NOVELIST HILARY MANTEL Ahead of the BBC adaptation of 'Wolf Hall', the novelist's story

A BBC adaptation of Wolf Hall is only the latest triumph for the double Booker winner. But what is the novelist's story?

Hilary Mantel is a maker of literary history. Wolf Hall, an action-packed 650-page brick of a book about the rise and rise of Thomas Cromwell, won the Man Booker Prize in 2009. Its successor, the just as sturdy Bring Up the Bodies, followed it onto the Booker rostrum three years later - the first sequel ever to win the prize in its 44-year history. Then came the RSC's stage adaptation of both novels, which started in Stratford, proceeded to the West End and this year goes to Broadway. And now the BBC has adapted Wolf Hall, with Mark Rylance (pictured below) in the title role. For a novelist who has suffered more than most for her art, this double victory for Mantel comes as a remarkable validation.

theartsdesk Q&A: Playwright Ayub Khan Din

THE ARTS DESK Q&A: PLAYWRIGHT AYUB KHAN DIN The author of 'East Is East' on bringing his tyrannical father back to life onstage

The author of 'East Is East' on bringing his tyrannical father back to life onstage

It’s been quite a journey for Ayub Khan Din. Born in 1961, the acclaimed playwright grew up in a crowded Salford household, the youngest child of a Pakistani father and a white English mother. The cultural clashes he witnessed – as his Anglicised older siblings fought against the straitjacket of Muslim tradition – were the raw material for East Is East. His admired and important play, first performed in 1996 and soon made into a popular film, is back on tour after a run in the West End.

theartsdesk Q&A: Playwright Nina Raine

THEARTSDESK Q&A: PLAYWRIGHT NINA RAINE As a hit play about the NHS returns, the author-director explains its creation

As a hit play about the NHS returns, the author-director explains its creation

When writers research, it’s not all about digging for facts. Feelings also count. When Nina Raine spent three months visiting hospitals for a play about the medical profession, she found a strange feeling spontaneously erupting inside herself. “The funny thing is I was getting up early for me, 6.30, to get on a bus to be at the place by a quarter to eight and I just started within a week to feel like a put-upon doctor saving people’s lives. Don’t these people realise I’m going to hospital? You do start to get this God complex.”

Miloš Karadaglić, 'the guitar player of the people'

MILOS KARADAGLIC, 'THE GUITAR PLAYER OF THE PEOPLE' How the man from Montenegro put the classical guitar in the spotlight

How the man from Montenegro put the classical guitar in the spotlight

Compared to grand divas, virtuoso pianists or stupendous fiddlers, legends of the classical guitar have been few in number. Once you've ticked off Segovia, Julian Bream and John Williams you're pretty much done with the household names. This isn't to impugn the musical powers of players such as Craig Ogden, Pepe Romero, Sharon Isbin or David Russell, it's more a reflection of the niche nature of the instrument. If Beethoven or Mozart had written guitar concertos – or Berlioz, an accomplished guitarist – who knows how different it could have been.

10 Questions for Songwriter Jackson Browne

10 QUESTIONS FOR SONGWRITER JACKSON BROWNE Veteran tunesmith on politics, David Geffen and life with the Eagles

Veteran tunesmith on politics, David Geffen and life with the Eagles

If there's one commonly-known fact about Jackson Browne, it's that (with a bit of help from Glenn Frey) he wrote "Take It Easy" for the Eagles. The first track off their first album, and their first hit single, it remained a trademark for the band despite all the changes they subsequently went through. The following year, 1973, Browne released his own recording of "Take It Easy" on his second album, For Everyman. While the Eagles' version was harmony-packed and radio-friendly, Jackson's version was more introspective and philosophical, as much of his work tends to be.

10 Questions for Musician Michael League

10 QUESTIONS FOR MUSICIAN MICHAEL LEAGUE Snarky Puppy's bassist and bandleader on composing for a collective

Snarky Puppy's bassist and bandleader on composing for a collective

Michael League is the Grammy Award-winning bassist, composer, producer and bandleader with NYC-based jazz-funk-fusion band Snarky Puppy. Formed in Denton, Texas, in 2004, Snarky Puppy is comprised of a collective of over 30 musicians. In addition to touring and recording, the band is committed to music education, holding over 100 clinics, workshops, and masterclasses in the US, Canada, the UK, France, the Netherlands, Germany and Belgium.

theartsdesk Q&A: Choreographer Wayne McGregor

British dance-maker shares his views on creative practice, cognitive neuroscience, and critics

How do you know Wayne McGregor? Dance-goers with long memories might remember Wayne McGregor as the wunderkind who founded his own company and became resident choreographer at The Place aged just 22. Lovers of contemporary dance will be familiar with his company Random Dance, which boasts some of the best dancers in the business and periodically brings sophisticated, hi-tech pieces to Sadler’s Wells.

Annie Lennox: The Jazz Singer

ANNIE LENNOX: THE JAZZ SINGER Britain's best-selling singer on her new jazz album, Amy Winehouse and existential loneliness

Britain's best-selling singer on her new jazz album, Amy Winehouse and existential loneliness

Annie Lennox is a far more fascinating artist than she’s often given credit for. Perhaps because she has been around for decades (she’s now 59) and hasn’t self-destructed like her friend Amy Winehouse or gone into exile for ages like Kate Bush, or Patti Smith, she has less of a fierce mystique and feels more a familiar part of the landscape.

10 Questions for Musician Fuse ODG

10 QUESTIONS FOR MUSICIAN FUSE ODG Anglo-Ghanaian rising star of the Afrobeats scene on making a stand for Africa

Anglo-Ghanaian rising star of the Afrobeats scene on making a stand for Africa

Anglo-Ghanaian musician Fuse ODG – born Nana Richard Abiona – is a leading exponent of the new Afrobeats movement, which combines Western pop and rap with Nigerian and Ghanaian pop, and some stylistic elements from the Fela Kuti-inspired Afrobeat scene. Unlike many of his contemporaries on the scene, Fuse spent many years of his childhood in Ghana, returning to London for secondary school, and has detailed first-hand experience of both cultures. He retains a musical interest in both countries, and is the first British musician to be nominated for two Ghanaian music awards.