Question and answer interviews

Interview: 10 Questions for Nik Kershaw

10 QUESTIONS FOR NIK KERSHAW The Eighties pop star talks prog rock, Pretty in Pink and bumping shopping trolleys with The Prodigy

The Eighties pop star talks prog rock, Pretty in Pink and bumping shopping trolleys with The Prodigy

Nik Kershaw (b 1958) is best known for a run of hits in the mid-Eighties, songs such as “Wouldn’t It Be Good”, “I Won’t Let The Sun Go Down on Me”, “The Riddle” and “Wide Boy”. He achieved international success and played Live Aid in 1985. Raised in Ipswich, he had a background in local bands before his breakthrough came with 1984’s Human Racing album. His look from the era, all mullet, snood and casual suit, has become definitive Eighties imagery.

theartsdesk Q&A: Playwright Simon Stephens

NATIONAL THEATRE AT 50  Simon Stephens on adapting The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time for the stage

The most prolific voice in British theatre has adapted Ibsen and Mark Haddon. What makes him tick?

Simon Stephens (b 1971) is the most prolific British playwright of his generation. Born and brought up in Stockport, he began writing as a student in York University and had produced seven plays before his Bluebird was produced at the Royal Court in 1998. In due course along came angry, searching, passionate statements about society and belonging with punchy titles like Motortown (2006), Pornography (2007) and Punk Rock (2009) (pictured below right).

Q&A: DJ and Festival Promoter Rob Da Bank

Q&A: ROB DA BANK DJ/promoter invites us into the Bestival possible worlds

DJ/promoter invites us into the Bestival possible worlds

The 21st-century British summer would be a very different thing were it not for Rob Da Bank. With the Bestival brand, Rob – originally Robert Gorham – and his wife Josie have, over the past decade, redefined the weekend music festival, setting the stage for the current massive proliferation of boutique events.

theartsdesk Q&A: Musician Jimmy Cliff

THEARTSDESK Q&A: JIMMY CLIFF One of reggae's breakout stars speaks on everything from Peter O'Toole to bongo drums

One of reggae's breakout stars speaks on everything from Peter O'Toole to bongo drums

Jimmy Cliff (b 1948) is one of Jamaican music’s biggest names. Raised in the countryside, he went to Kingston in his teens and persuaded record shop owner Leslie Kong to record him. The resulting song, “Hurricane Hattie”, was the first of a string of local hits but in the late Sixties he moved to London and, working with Chris Blackwell’s Island Records, his songs such as “Wonderful World, Beautiful People” and “Vietnam”, the latter a favourite of Bob Dylan, reached a far wider audience, becoming hits in Europe.

Interview: 10 Questions for Daryl Hall

10 QUESTIONS FOR DARYL HALL: The rock'n'soul veteran talks music, TV and Hall & Oates

The rock'n'soul veteran talks music, TV and Hall & Oates

When he joined up with John Oates, Daryl Hall became half of one of the most successful duos in pop history, which has sold upwards of 60 million albums. From the mid-Seventies to the late Eighties, the pair notched six platinum albums and posted a remarkable streak of hit singles. Six of them were American chart-toppers, including "Kiss On My List", "Rich Girl", "Private Eyes" and "Out of Touch", while even the ones which didn't reach Number One became pop standards anyway, including "Sara Smile" and "Family Man".

Interview: 10 Questions for Bobcat Goldthwait

10 QUESTIONS FOR BOBCAT GOLDTHWAIT: The US comic-turned-director on the awful truth behind his latest satire, God Bless America

The US comic-turned-director on the awful truth behind his latest satire, God Bless America

Tracing a career arc which has taken him from stand-up comic to actor, writer and film director, it's not too fanciful to describe Bobcat Goldthwait as an anarchic, indie, low budget version of Woody Allen. The 50-year-old New Yorker started out in the clubs of Boston before heading west to Hollywood in the 1980s, where he cultivated a shrill-voiced, nervy, confrontational comic persona to considerable success.

theartsdesk Q&A: Director Hugh Hudson

HUGH HUDSON Q&A: The filmmaker who triumphed with Chariots of Fire explains why he has rebooted his unloved epic Revolution. Portrait by Charlotte MacMillan

The filmmaker who triumphed with Chariots of Fire has rebooted his unloved epic Revolution

Thirty years ago the British were coming. So cried Colin Welland rallyingly from the stage of the Academy Awards, having just accepted an Oscar for best screenplay. And now Chariots of Fire is coming again, twice. An energetic stage reincarnation has sprinted round the block at Hampstead Theatre and now jogs along to the Gielgud, where it will continue to leave barely a dry eye in the house. And then there is the film itself, out shortly for another turn on the red carpet in this Olympic season.

Interview: Film composer Ilan Eshkeri

ILAN ESHKERI: The composer of scores for Coriolanus, Stardust and Young Victoria on the art of writing for film

The man who wrote the scores for Coriolanus, Kick Ass, Stardust and Young Victoria on the tricks of his trade

At his studio near White City in West London (he did say it was Notting Hill) Ilan Eshkeri’s is adding a scratchy cello to a key moment in Ralph Fiennes film of Shakespeare’s Coriolanus. It’s the moment the inhabitants of Rome realise that Coriolanus, an exile, is about to attack them. It is, he says of the suitably ominous sound, “bent out of tune, weird – I’m getting into the sounds of breathing, I like a lot of dirt.” In the studio is his producer Steve McLaughlin, and there are a couple of assistants bustling around.

Interview: 10 Questions for Joe Walsh

10 QUESTIONS FOR JOE WALSH: The guitarist and sometime Eagle talks electronica, power trios, John Belushi and more

The guitarist and sometime Eagle talks electronica, power trios, John Belushi and more

Joe Walsh is one of classic American rock’s guitar heroes. For the solo at the end of The Eagles' “Hotel California” alone, he earned his place in those ranks, but he’s done a whole lot more in the 44 years he’s been a professional musician.

theartsdesk Q&A: Conductor Gustavo Dudamel

EDITORS' PICK: Q&A WITH GUSTAVO DUDAMEL As the Venezuelan conductor returns to the Barbican with the LA Philharmonic this week, we revisit our revealing 2012 interview with him

As the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra return to the UK, its maestro explains where his loyalties lie

At the Royal Albert Hall one summer evening in 2007, a teeming ensemble of young South Americans served up a BBC Prom that is the most YouTubed classical concert this side of the Three Tenors. Under the baton of the compelling Gustavo Dudamel, an all-dancing, all-shouting account of “Mambo” from West Side Story has become the roof-raising sign-off of the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra of Venezuela, who last year dropped the word Youth from their name.