Interviews, Q&amp;As and feature articles<br />

Brighton Festival 2016 Launches with Guest Director Laurie Anderson

BRIGHTON FESTIVAL 2016 WITH GUEST DIRECTOR LAURIE ANDERSON The big reveal arrives for Brighton & Hove's annual feast of the arts

The big reveal arrives for Brighton & Hove's annual feast of the arts

The Brighton Festival 2016, which explodes into life again this year on Saturday May 7, has revealed its programme. Guest Director Laurie Anderson sent a short film in support of the occasion, while Chief Executive Andrew Comben, acknowledging this as the 50th edition of the Festival, added: “Every year since 1967 some of the greatest artists, performers and thinkers have come together with some of the most open-minded and enthusiastic audiences anywhere for a festival whose home is one of the most artistically rich and geographically blessed places in the country.”

We Made It: 'Carol' Costume Designer Sandy Powell

WE MADE IT: 'CAROL' COSTUME DESIGNER SANDY POWELL How she brought a melange of styles to Todd Haynes's sublime period romance

How she brought a melange of styles to Todd Haynes's sublime period romance

If there is a successor to the great Hollywood costume designer Edith Head, it is Sandy Powell, the British designer of six films directed by Martin Scorsese, three each by Todd Haynes and Neil Jordan, and others by the likes of Derek Jarman, Sally Potter, Stephen Frears and Julie Taymor. Powell’s recent Oscar nominations for designing the costumes for Haynes’s Carol and Kenneth Branagh’s Cinderella raised her total to 12: her wins have come for Shakespeare in Love, Scorsese’s The Aviator, and Young Victoria.

Rock History Revisited in HBO's Vinyl

ROCK HISTORY REVISITED IN HBO'S VINYL Scorsese and Jagger shine a light on the Seventies music business

Scorsese and Jagger shine a light on the Seventies music business

It was 20 years ago that Mick Jagger suggested to Martin Scorsese that they should make a film "that spanned four decades of the world of music in New York City". The idea has finally come to fruition as Vinyl, HBO's new 10-part series that kicks off on Sky Atlantic on Monday 15 February.

We Made It: Stuntwoman Tracy Caudle

WE MADE IT: STUNTWOMAN TRACY CAUDLE Forget Evel Knievel: a well-crafted stunt is more about precision than daring

Forget Evel Knievel: a well-crafted stunt is more about precision than daring

With a raft of high-quality digital effects available, real stunts might seem a little old-fashioned. In truth, the art of the stunt is alive and well: according to veteran performer Tracy Caudle, not only is it often cheaper to film the real thing, but “a computerised fall never looks quite right.” She has filmed scenes for TV and film, and with credits including Skyfall, Shaun of the Dead, Midsomer Murders and Doctor Who, chances are you’ve seen her fall to her death, crash a car or come to grisly grief one way or another, many times over.

White smoke at the CBSO: Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla for Music Director

WHITE SMOKE AT THE CBSO: MIRGA GRAZINYTE-TYLA FOR MUSIC DIRECTOR 29-year-old Lithuanian conductor follows Andris Nelsons in Birmingham

29-year-old Lithuanian conductor follows Andris Nelsons in Birmingham

The City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra's appointment of the Lithuanian conductor Mirga Gražinytė-Tyla as its new Music Director won’t have surprised many concertgoers in Birmingham – or indeed regular readers of theartsdesk. The post has been vacant since Andris Nelsons’ premature departure in summer 2015, and the last few months in Birmingham have seen a string of concerts clearly intended as thinly-disguised auditions for conductors of various ages and nationalities.

The police stopped 'To be or not to be' and asked to see our permits

'HAMLET' DETAINED? The police stopped 'To be or not to be' and asked to see our permits

A company member reveals what happened when the Globe's world tour of Hamlet performed for refugees from Central African Republic

Za’atari set a precedent. Our performance in the Syrian refugee camp in Jordan became a template for how to perform Hamlet in every nation in the world – in a world that rendered travel to Syria, Yemen, Libya and Central African Republic out of the question. And it paved the way for our most ad hoc and unconventional performance yet.

100 Works of Art That Will Define Our Age

100 WORKS OF ART THAT WILL DEFINE OUR AGE The book's author on why predicting the future isn't quite as risky as it seems

The book's author on why predicting the future isn't quite as risky as it seems

The back cover of my book makes a big claim. “This book dares”, it says, “to predict the 100 most significant works of art made since the 1990s.” Although the tagline is an entirely accurate description of what I attempt to accomplish in my study of contemporary art, the phrase “dares to predict” has always made me a little anxious. It seems to suggest that the act of forecasting or foreseeing is deliberately provocative, defiant, or even risky.

theartsdesk in Groningen: Uniting Europe with Music

THEARTSDESK IN GRONINGEN: UNITING EUROPE WITH MUSIC Frontiers are breached at Eurosonic festival and the European Border Breakers Awards

Frontiers are breached at Eurosonic festival and the European Border Breakers Awards

The nature of Europe, its administration, institutions and its porousness are hot topics. Sectors of Britain’s media and political class hyperventilate over trumped-up concerns while real issues which are just about impossible to address remain unresolved. In this climate, the European Border Breakers Awards are ripe for misinterpretation. Instead of being for those devising the shrewdest ways to slip in and out of countries, they are an annual European Union-sponsored award presented to pop musicians achieving success beyond their own borders.

Keep Calm and Knuckle Under

KEEP CALM AND KNUCKLE UNDER A new book claims that behind our love for all things retro lies a sinister, repressive ideology - but is this fair?

A new book claims that behind our love for all things retro lies a sinister, repressive ideology - but is this fair?

“He lives in Woolwich and Warsaw”. From which author note you might conclude that Owen Hatherley, author of The Ministry of Nostalgia, is not your ordinary kind of UK critic, comfortably ensconced (usually) in North or fashionable East London. Fashion has always passed Woolwich, if not Warsaw, by, though Hatherley himself is quietly stylish, somewhat in the manner of his hero Jarvis Cocker. Can one extrapolate a whiff of left-puritanism from this alliterative choice of abode? Perhaps, but also a romanticism.

Seven sides of Alan Rickman

SEVEN SIDES OF ALAN RICKMAN He was much more than one of the great British villains, as these clips demonstrate

He was much more than one of the great British villains, as these clips demonstrate

When sorrows come they come not in single spies. It is a bad week to be 69. Hard on the heels of David Bowie's death from cancer comes Alan Rickman's. He was an actor who radiated a sinful allure that first gave theatregoers the hot flushes back in 1985 when he played the Vicomte de Valmont in Christopher Hampton's Les Liaisons Dangereues. His co-star was Lindsay Duncan with whom he went on to share other highlights on stage: Private Lives in the West End and on Broadway, John Gabriel Borkman at the Abbey in Dublin.