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One woman's remarkable story of surviving Auschwitz through friendship, determination, luck and dance
A wide range of Ulster artwork produced in Rome
As Guy Masterson prepares to perform his one-man adaptation of Animal Farm for the last time, he tells Joanne Savage about its enduring relevance
County Tyrone writer Francis Hagan mixes sci-fi elements and apocalyptic vision in his debut novel with almost Orwellian results, argues Joanne Savage
The Waterboys frontman has set Yeats’s poetry to music and tells Joanne Savage about being radical with the Irishman’s lyrics
Markethill master of the crime thriller Stuart Neville delivers another gruesome page-turner, writes Joanne Savage
Michael Winterbottom’s adaptation of Jim Thompson’s 1952 noir novel has been roundly criticised for its scenes of excessive violence. Joanne Savage asks if the on-screen brutality can be justified
Joanne Savage is less than impressed on a stroll through Belfast Exposed
Photographer Bernie Brown talks to Joanne Savage about capturing the landscape and mood of Strangford Lough with her wily lens
One-man production of Dylan Thomas’s masterpiece brilliantly discombobulates, writes Joanne Savage
Showing at the QFT this week, Videocracy explores the unfreedom of the media and the chauvinism of pop culture in Berlusconi’s Italy
Dirk Benedict, better known as Face from The A-Team, prepares to play Columbo in Belfast. Joanne Savage caught up with the former soldier of fortune
Joanne Savage enjoys a Renaissance of fine art at Gormley's
Howard Wright is wonderfully irreverent in his first poetry collection, writes Joanne Savage
'Damien Hirst is a complete charlatan.' Belfast's busiest artist on makes good art, cultural courage and why it is more important to journey than arrive
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