The latest play from theatrical provocateur Howard Brenton is about Winston Churchill's visit to Joseph Stalin in Moscow in 1942, and stars Roger Allam (pictured) and Peter Forbes.
Neville Chamberlain admitted in a candid letter that he thought Britain was better off without him as prime minister, days ...
Philippe Sands’ comments, accusing the Conservatives of playing into an antisemitic trope, were dismissed as an “absurd smear ...
Churchill and Stalin get lost in translation but bond over a shared love of booze and ruthlessness in Howard Brenton’s clever ...
The beleaguered politician made the painful admission four days after he resigned in May 1940. He quit after a disastrous ...
While filming Rocky IV, Sylvester Stallone gave Dolph Lundgren "orders to try to knock [him] out while the cameras were ...
Hello and welcome to another edition of the Weekly Vine. In this week’s edition, we have The Free Speech Delusion, the rise ...
Former Chief of CIA's Central Eurasia Division Rob Dannenberg shares perspective of a seasoned Russia hand on what's at stake in Ukraine ...
By allowing Churchill’s reflections – his triumphs and regrets alike - to take center stage, David Payne delivers a performance that is complex, compelling, and deeply human. CHURCHILL - at The ...
Packed with newspaper clippings, drawings and handwritten reflections, WI community scrapbooks provide a glimpse into how ...
It was during a Tory rally on July 20, 1957, organized to commemorate 25 years of public service by Alan Tindal Lennox-Boyd, ...
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