The invisible man: Bryan died in an accident in 2015. Why did it take 10 years to identify him?
On my radar: Kit de Waal’s cultural highlights
Born in Birmingham in 1960, Mandy Theresa O’Loughlin is better known as author Kit de Waal. After a career as a magistrate specialising in adoption and foster care, she studied creative writing at Oxford Brookes University. Her debut novel, My Name Is Leon, was published in 2016, winning the Kerry Group Irish novel of the year award. De Waal, who chairs this year’s judging panel for the Women’s prize for fiction, is a fellow at Birkbeck, University of London, where she set up a scholarship for writers from marginalised backgrounds. Her latest book, The Best of Everything, is out now (Tinder Press
Olly Alexander review – part night creature, part light entertainer
Palladium, LondonThe singer and actor hints at an outre new synth-heavy sound, drawn largely from latest album Polari. He stops short, though, of scaring his daytime TV fans“I’m all about playful subversion,” declares Olly Alexander with a grin on the final night of his UK tour. Clad in a series of outfits whose shiny buttons nod towards London’s pearly kings and queens and the dressing-up box – there’s one handily located on the left side of the stage – he is outlining the essence of Polari, the slang once used by the LGBTQ+ community, showfolk and the denizens of London’s Soho, as was.Evolving out of the vocabularies of Italian immigrants and Travellers to evade the understanding of law enforcement and mainstream society in the 19th and early-mid 20th centuries, Polari also doubles as the title of Alexander’s latest, queer-club pop-themed album. Released two months ago, it was the first under his own name; previously, he had traded as Years & Years, first as a band, then as a solo project
From The Return to The Last of Us: a complete guide to this week’s entertainment
The ReturnOut now Odysseus (Ralph Fiennes) washes up looking like something the cat dragged in after 20 years away at the Trojan wars. Penelope (Juliette Binoche), his wife, has troubles of her own: a bunch of unwelcome suitors plotting to marry her and kill her son. An adaptation of Homer’s Odyssey notable for reuniting the leads of The English Patient.The AmateurOut now Rami Malek is a CIA decoder whose world is turned upside down when his wife is killed. But knowledge is, as they say, power, so he attempts to put his work in intelligence to a new purpose: personal revenge
Almost a third of UK independent cinemas say they are at risk
Almost a third of independent cinemas face closure within next three to five years without investment, according to new research.A survey conducted by the Independent Cinema Office (ICO) found that 31% of independent cinemas and mixed arts venues in the UK said they would not be able to remain operational without capital investment, while a further 28% were unsure of their future viability.Of the 109 venues polled, only 41% were confident that they could survive the next three years. The 69 venues that were able to provide estimates of their capital funding needs gave figures totalling more than £79m.The most in-demand types of capital investment were: upgrading equipment and interiors (89%); investing in environmental sustainability (60%); business growth (56%); and building repairs (54%)
Noel Clarke ‘precisely the man’ depicted in Guardian’s reporting, high court told
Noel Clarke has been shown to be “precisely the man” depicted in the Guardian’s articles accusing him of sexual misconduct, vindicating its journalism, the high court has heard.In closing submissions in the former Doctor Who actor’s libel claim against Guardian News and Media (GNM), Gavin Millar KC said Clarke had been forced to come up with an “elaborate conspiracy theory” to try to rebut the “overwhelming evidence” against him.“[The claimant] had long pinned his hopes on [the defendant’s] witnesses not attending trial,” said Millar in written submissions.“If they did, then [Clarke] had a problem: to explain how it was that (i) 28 individuals had been willing to file witness statements verified by statements of truth attesting to his misconduct, (ii) very many more had given evidence as sources … in the course of its journalistic investigation, and (iii) [the Guardian], a respected and trusted source of news reporting, could have come to publish the articles in issue if their accounts were untrue.“So [Clarke] needed to frame a conspiracy of malevolent liars who were able and willing not only to deceive the Guardian and now this court, and including people who recruited the Guardian to its ends, persuading it to publish their lies and – in the process – deceive its editor-in-chief, Ms [Katharine] Viner, into believing that it was in the public interest to publish them
The Guardian view on William Morris: how the Strawberry Thief took over the world | Editorial
The great 19th-century designer William Morris wasn’t thinking of a £2 floral iPhone cover when he wrote “Tomorrow, the civilised world shall have a new art, a glorious art, made by the people and for the people.” In his lifetime he failed in his dream of making art for all, while paying his workers fairly. Only the homes of the wealthy were decorated by Morris & Co. As he feared, he had simply been “ministering to the swinish luxury of the rich”.But today his designs can be found everywhere, from John Lewis to Chinese online marketplace Temu
Steel was a security risk. What about UK gas storage? | Nils Pratley
Number of payrolled workers in UK fell by 78,000 ahead of budget tax rise
‘She helps cheer me up’: the people forming relationships with AI chatbots
Mobile phones in schools can be an aid to learning | Letter
Australia’s Georgia Amoore joins Washington as No 6 pick in WNBA draft
Star-in-waiting Paige Bueckers taken by Dallas with No 1 pick in WNBA draft