Liza Minnelli, Royal Festival Hall

LIZA MINNELLI, ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL An unforgettable night with the great performer, rising to the heights across a generous set

An unforgettable night with the great performer, rising to the heights across a generous set

It’s Weimar Berlin time as the Southbank Centre’s The Rest is Noise festival moves through the 20th-century music scene – so it must be Liza Minnelli time too. Or must it? Though she’s immortalised through her Americanisation of Sally Bowles in Bob Fosse’s film of Cabaret, the Kander and Ebb torchsong for which she is most famous, “Maybe This Time”, belongs very decidedly to the 1960s (it was written for Kaye Ballard, not for the 1972 movie).  

Dancing on the Edge, Series Finale, BBC Two

Poliakoff's slow-burner about jazz and high society goes out with a bang

Stephen Poliakoff's slow-burning drama had turned into a propulsive whodunnit by this final episode, hurtling towards a resolution with panache and surprise. The five-part mini-series about a black jazz band in early 1930s high society has had the feel of an exploratory score at times. With syncopated beats and riffs decorating its unfolding narrative, the occasional scene and detail has seemed superfluous. But Poliakoff has had his reasons. By episode five, almost every character had a motive for murdering Jessie (Angel Coulby), the lead singer, or at least assisting in a cover-up.

Lulu, Welsh National Opera

LULU, WELSH NATIONAL OPERA Berg's unfinished masterpiece in a stunning production under WNO's new director

Berg's unfinished masterpiece in a stunning production under WNO's new director

What-ifs and might-have-beens are usually as pointless in music as in any other walk of life. Still one can’t help wondering how Alban Berg would have completed – and, no less interesting, revised – his opera Lulu, if he hadn’t been stung by some philistine insect in the summer of 1935 and died of the resulting septicaemia that Christmas Eve, with the last act unfinished and barely half-orchestrated.

Tango Fire: Flames of Desire, Peacock Theatre

Exquisite dancers, a charismatic chanteur, and an electrifying band

If by the end of a show you’ve both wowed and ouched out loud, I would declare it’s safe to say you’re getting your money's-worth. Tango Fire's new show at the Peacock Theatre, Flames of Desire, does all the above and more. In fact it could be described as the West End equivalent to a supermarket deal the average savvy consumer simply can’t resist – three for the price of one: exquisite dancers, a charismatic chanteur, and an electrifying band.

A Young Doctor's Notebook, Sky Arts 1

A YOUNG DOCTOR'S NOTEBOOK, SKY ARTS 1 Daniel Radcliffe and John Hamm in, of all things, a Soviet medical sitcom based on Bulgakov

Daniel Radcliffe and John Hamm in, of all things, a Soviet medical sitcom based on Bulgakov

Bulgakov gets about more than you’d think. As a character in the play Collaborators, the Russian novelist was most recently seen helping Stalin with his memoirs. Within the last couple of years his novels The Master and Margarita and The White Guard have both been adapted for the stage, while A Dog’s Heart was turned into an opera. All of these works were imbued with the Bulgakovian scent for phantasmal satire. So what's next for an author hooked on shape-shifting and the surreal?

DVD: Boris Barnet - Outskirts/By the Bluest of Seas

Russian/Soviet heroism in war and love in these re-released 1930s classics

Boris Barnet may not be as well known in film circles as his contemporaries Sergei Eisenstein or Alexander Dovzhenko, but his role in the first decade of Soviet cinema was no less important. What he lacks in the more pronounced experimentation of those two, he more than makes up in his depictions of the fabric of everyday life itself. His Outskirts of 1933 was one of the very first Soviet talkies, and followed on from Barnet's highly successful silent comedies.

theartsdesk in Florence: Hating the Sin, Loving the Sinner

THEARTSDESK IN FLORENCE: HATING THE SIN, LOVING THE SINNER A new exhibition at Palazzo Strozzi deals with the Fascist era as objectively as possible

A new exhibition at Palazzo Strozzi deals with the Fascist era as objectively as possible

Perhaps the longest-lasting, the oddest – and almost certainly the most gratuitous – battle still busy raging with its roots in the ideological conflicts of the past century is the one regarding the artistic output of Italy’s engagement with Fascism.

Interview: 10 Questions for Diana Krall

10 QUESTIONS FOR DIANA KRALL The jazz pianist and singer on family sing-a-longs, being fearless, Ziegfeld Girls, and why she's listening to Lippy Kids

The jazz pianist and singer on family sing-a-longs, being fearless, Ziegfeld Girls, and why she's listening to Lippy Kids

Jazz pianist and singer Diana Krall has won two Grammys and sold more than 15 million albums worldwide. Born in 1964 in Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada, she attended Berklee College of Music in the early 1980s and had her major breakthrough with the 1995 album, All for You: A Dedication to the Nat King Cole Trio. Produced by T Bone Burnett and featuring Marc Ribot on guitar (and a cameo from Howard Coward, a.k.a.

Coote, BBCSO, Saraste, Barbican Hall

Open-razor Shostakovich and transcendent Mahler hit the mark in a classy season launch

Somehow the manic cry of “Scooby-Doo man!” from the back of the stalls didn’t seem too incongruous. We were in the thick of Shostakovich’s craziest symphony, the Fourth, composed in the mid 1930s when such maverick Russian talent was about to be stamped on and potentially quite a sledgehammer of a season opener for the BBC Symphony Orchestra.

DVD: Cleopatra (1934)

CLEOPATRA Cecil B DeMille's vibrant, sexy 1934 epic looks as good as ever

Cecil B DeMille's vibrant, sexy Thirties epic looks as good as ever

Cleopatra didn’t hold a beast to her ass but in this lavish 1934 production, she could have. Cecil B DeMille amped up his two favourite topics - sex and sin - to create the world's second most opulent celluloid Cleopatra. Scripted by Waldemar Young (grandson of Brigham Young) and Vincent Lawrence (who seems to have kept working after his death), this hysterically fancy film was "based" on an "adaptation" of historical elements by Barlett Cormack - this is shorthand for “we only used the shiniest parts of the true story”.