From Maria to Franz Ferdinand: a complete guide to this week’s entertainment in the UK

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MariaOut now Directed by Pablo Larraín and written by Steven Knight, the same writer-director team behind the Diana, Princess of Wales biopic Spencer, this look at the life of opera singer Maria Callas stars Angelina Jolie and focuses on the period during which the star lived out of the public eye in Paris in the 1970s.BabygirlOut now A married mother of two with a hotshot job puts it all on the line for an all-consuming sizzling affair with a younger colleague in this erotic thriller starring Nicole Kidman and rising British star Harris Dickinson.Directed by Halina Reijn (of the excellent Bodies Bodies Bodies).CompanionOut now Jack Quaid is a standout among the current clutch of young-ish actors making names for themselves in genres such as horror and comedy.And so he should be, with Dennis Quaid and Meg Ryan for parents.

Here, he is in villain mode, for a creepy new psychological thriller also starring Sophie Thatcher and Lukas Gage.A Real PainOut now Family history resurfaces, creating new tensions, as two cousins, reserved family man David (Jesse Eisenberg) and live wire Benji (Kieran Culkin), travel around Poland to try to honour the memory of their grandmother, in this acclaimed comic drama written and directed by Eisenberg.Catherine BrayJakub Klimiuk Quintet with Mark LockheartPizza Express Jazz Club, London, 13 January Talented Polish jazz guitarist/composer Jakub Klimiuk is crafting a rare mix of New York edginess and Scandinavian avant-jazz impressionism.Now a UK regular, his partnership with founding Polar Bear/Loose Tubes saxophonist Mark Lockheart is quickly making waves.John FordhamMobb DeepO2 Academy Islington, London, 16 January Thirty years after the release of their hugely influential east coast rap classic, the relentlessly bleak The Infamous, the group – made up of rapper and producer Havoc, alongside Big Noyd and DJ L.

E.S.(original member producer Prodigy died in 2017) – arrive in the UK to celebrate their legacy.Michael CraggCupcakKe17 to 22 January; tour starts LondonChicago rapper CupcakKe, AKA Elizabeth Harris, brings her coterie of horned-up, graphic pop-rap to the UK in celebration of 2024’s Dauntless Manifesto.Expect the Charli xcx collaborator to turn each venue into a sweat-soaked club.

MCLove LifeGrand Theatre, Leeds, 16 to 18 January Kurt Weill’s penultimate Broadway musical, a collaboration with My Fair Lady lyricist Alan Jay Lerner, is staged by Opera North.This story of an archetypal American family, whose lives are traced through 150 years of their country’s history, is staged by Matthew Eberhardt and conducted by James Holmes.Andrew ClementsBreaking LinesEstorick Collection, London, 15 January to 11 May The radical poetic experiments of the Italian futurists are revisited in this unexpected view of a movement most famous for its art.In fact, futurist poetry was a form of visual art with its words scattered across the empty space of the page.Corrado Govoni and concrete poet Dom Sylvester Houédard are remembered.

Whistler PastelsHunterian Art Gallery, Glasgow, to 2 March The American-born James McNeill Whistler was an outrageous gunslinger of a character who galvanised 19th-century art.He was friends with Manet, a star in Paris, a scandalous success in Wilde’s London.This show reveals a lesser known side to his aesthetic ingenuity as it explores his passion for pastel.New ContemporariesICA, London, 15 January to 23 March This venerable showcase of the new marks its 75th birthday by returning to the ICA where it was staged in the 20th century.Here is a glimpse of art’s future as 35 young artists offer their visions of the personal and public.

Will it be a gathering of tomorrow’s greats?Sarah KirbyYorkshire Sculpture Park, near Wakefield, to 23 February Where better for a winter walk than Yorkshire Sculpture Park with its mix of landscapes, dotted with sculpture from subtle interventions to spectacular statues? Sarah Kirby’s attractive prints of the Park’s hills, dales and picturesque architecture add to the artistic tapestry.It’s a selling exhibition if you fancy a souvenir.Jonathan JonesThe Lonely LondonersKiln Theatre, London, to 22 February Roy Williams’s adaptation of Sam Selvon’s 1956 novel won tremendous reviews when it played at Jermyn Street theatre last year.Now the ambitions and realities of generation Windrush are laid out again as the show, made with rich song, stellar performances and a soaring sense of hope, transfers to the Kiln.Kate WyverSealSkinThe Lowry, Manchester, 16 January; then touring to 20 March With every full moon, the Selkies peel away their skin.

When a fisher discovers their secret and steals a skin, chaos is unleashed and a community unravels,Touring this spring, physical theatre company Tmesis retells this old Scottish folklore tale of love and betrayal with puppetry, projection and live acoustic music,KWResolution festivalThe Place, London, to 15 February This annual festival of new choreography is a showcase of upcoming talent that often yields a few golden nuggets,Each night is a complete lucky dip, with three wildly different shows across myriad styles of dance and performance,A good place to look for the names of the future.

Lyndsey WinshipChloe PettsSoho theatre, London, 13 to 25 January; then touring to 9 March The Kent-born standup is one of British comedy’s most accomplished new stars, applying dry wit and geezerish likability to some very timely topics.In her latest show, Petts weaves the hostile response to a recent Sky Sports presenting gig into tales of her head girl tenure while reflecting on the nuances of her gender identity.Rachel AroestiSign up to Inside SaturdayThe only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine.Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend.after newsletter promotionSeveranceApple TV+, 17 January At Lumon Industries, employees agree to medically divide their professional and personal brains in order to carry out classified work.

Yet season one of this exquisitely unsettling drama saw a group of wretched office dwellers, led by Adam Scott’s Mark, successfully override the psychological split,Three years on, the series returns to unearth more mind-boggling corporate subterfuge,Molly-Mae: Behind It AllPrime Video, 17 January Parlaying a 2019 stint on Love Island into a colossally successful career as an Instagram influencer might not be the most edifying of achievements, but Molly-Mae Hague’s career has much to tell us about modern celebrity,This new documentary looks past the Facetuned perfection as the 25-year-old juggles motherhood with content production,Untold: Born in the Limelight – Nepo BabiesChannel 4, 16 January, 11.

05pm After New York magazine christened 2022 “the year of the nepo baby”, many celebrity offspring were forced to check their privilege.In this documentary, Phoenix Chi Brown – daughter of Mel B – sees just how advantageous being a pop star’s daughter really is.FromSky Max/Now, 14 January, 9pm John Griffin’s creepy sci-fi horror – hailed as a future cult classic in the US – returns to the town that traps all who enter (and torments them at night with nightmarish ghouls) for a third season chock-full of terrifying twists and a few long-awaited clues regarding the mysterious forces behind the characters’ plight.RADonkey Kong Country Returns HDNintendo Switch, out 16 January Two players can barrel through this jungle-themed platformer as Nintendo’s troublesome ape and his nephew Diddy Kong, in search of stolen bananas.Skate City New YorkApple Arcade, out now The combination of simple touchscreen skateboarding controls and real-world New York skate spots is a clever one in this chill but stylish game for Apple’s subscription service.

Keza MacDonaldFranz Ferdinand – The Human Fear Out now The Scottish post-punkers return with their sixth album, and a new member following the departure of original drummer Paul Thomson in 2021.Produced by Mark Ralph (Years & Years, Clean Bandit), it’s an album that marries big pop melodies to lyrics about how fears remind us we’re human.Aphex Twin – Music from the Merch Desk (2016-2023) Out now Enigmatic knob-twiddler Aphex Twin assembles 38 rare dance music-adjacent head-scramblers on this surprise compilation.As the title suggests, the songs – including the pulsating, tricky-to-Google korg 1b ru,ec,e [London 19.08.

2023] – are taken from one-off vinyl releases sold at his shows.Ringo Starr – Look UpOut now Drumming Is My Madness hitmaker and ex-Beatle Ringo Starr follows up 2019’s What’s My Name with this country album, produced by T Bone Burnett.Made up of 11 original songs, Look Up also features the likes of Alison Krauss, Billy Strings and Larkin Poe.Moonchild Sanelly – Full Moon Out now Last year saw South African singer, songwriter and rapper Moonchild Sanelly add Self Esteem to a top-notch list of collaborators that includes Beyoncé, Wizkid and Gorillaz.She follows that up with this third album of “future-ghetto funk”, which includes kinetic, club-ready bangers Big Booty and Do My Dance.

MCYou Are ErrorPodcast Glitches are the bane of most gaming experiences but this charming series celebrates video game mistakes as a sign of the human in the machine.Highlights include episodes on Arabic mistranslations and strange horse renderings.Chinese Cooking DemystifiedYouTube Shenzhen-based couple Steph and Chris host this series testing out regional Chinese recipes and explaining ingredients to a western audience.Begin with their explainer on the 63 cuisines of China, from braised donkey to blood duck.Archive on 4: Do You Speak English?Radio 4, 11 January Looking back on 80 years of BBC programming, Josephine McDermott hosts a fascinating episode of the longrunning Radio 4 Archive series examining how BBC shows have taught English in postwar Europe and modern-day Afghanistan.

Ammar Kalia
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Frasers Group says two-thirds of retail staff are still on zero-hours contracts

The owner of Sports Direct has confirmed that two-thirds of its retail workforce remain on zero-hours contracts ahead of new legislation designed to limit their use.Frasers Group told MPs who are examining plans to strengthen protection for employees that 11,500 staff were on the contracts, which do not guarantee any weekly working shifts, and did not receive compensation even if shifts were changed at the last minute.MPs on parliament’s business and trade select committee also heard that three-quarters (4,000) of the 5,200 people employed at the group’s main warehouse in Derbyshire are agency workers who can be let go without notice, more than eight years after the company promised MPs it would move them on to permanent contracts.The testimony came from Andy Brown, chief people officer at Frasers Group – which owns House of Fraser, the luxury streetwear chain Flannels, Evans Cycles and Sports Direct. He admitted the pace of change was “certainly not fast”, with an average 200 people a year shifting from agency to permanent contracts over the past three years

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New year downers are becoming normal at JD Sports | Nils Pratley

It wasn’t a full-on profits warning – more of a 5%-ish trim to forecasts. But JD Sports’ trading update will feel particularly disappointing to its shareholders because this was the second January in a row that the sportswear retailer has delivered a new year downer on profit expectations. The spiel was also identical, more or less.A year ago, the group blamed “more cautious consumer spending” and “an elevated level of promotional activity during the peak trading period”. On Tuesday it cited “a challenging and volatile market that saw increased promotional activity” as revenues fell 1

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US sues Elon Musk for allegedly failing to disclose early Twitter stock purchase

A US financial regulator has sued Elon Musk for allegedly failing to disclose his ownership of Twitter stock and later acquiring shares in the company at “artificially low prices”, stiffing other shareholders.The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filed suit against Musk late on Tuesday in Washington DC federal court for alleged securities violations. According to the suit, Musk did not disclose that he had acquired a 5% stake in the company in a timely manner, which allowed him “to underpay by at least $150 million for shares he purchased after his financial beneficial ownership report was due”.Alex Spiro, a lawyer for Musk, told Bloomberg that the SEC’s case amounted to “an admission” that the agency had no case. Musk, Spiro said, “has done nothing wrong and everyone sees this sham for what it is”

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Chinese officials reportedly discuss sale of TikTok in US to Elon Musk

Chinese officials have reportedly held preliminary talks about a potential option to sell TikTok’s operations in the US to the billionaire Elon Musk, should the short-video app be unable to avoid an impending ban. Another option is that Musk acts as a broker in a deal to sell the app.Beijing officials prefer that TikTok remains under the control of its Chinese parent, Bytedance, but have discussed other options including a sale to Musk, Bloomberg reported. The Financial Times reported on the same day that the officials had discussed the preliminary possibility of Musk functioning as a go-between for Bytedance and any potential buyer that would prevent the app from being shut down.“We can’t be expected to comment on pure fiction,” a TikTok spokesperson said, responding to the report

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Police report says former MLB pitcher Brian Matusz died at 37 of likely overdose

The former Baltimore Orioles pitcher Brian Matusz died at the age of 37 after an apparent drug overdose, according to police documents.The Orioles announced Matusz’s death last week. According to a report by the Phoenix Police Department obtained by the Baltimore Banner, Matusz’s body was found by his mother, Elizabeth, on 6 January after she went to check on him in his home. A lighter, straw and a small square of aluminum foil, often used for ingesting drugs, were near his body. The report says police are not treating the death as suspicious

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Man charged with stalking Caitlin Clark disrupts court hearing

A man charged with stalking and harassing basketball star Caitlin Clark was rebuked after becoming disruptive during a court appearance on Tuesday.Michael Lewis, of Denton, Texas, was arrested on Monday at a hotel in Indianapolis, where Clark plays for the Indiana Fever, after allegedly sending threatening messages to the WNBA star, some of which were sexual in nature.The 55-year-old Lewis sat back in his chair when he entered Marion County Superior Court and said “guilty as charged”. He went on to interrupt the proceedings on several occasions, saying “I guess you got the wrong guy”. He also said “I need my medicines” when the court asked him if he had any mental health issues