This city-centre hotel puts contemporary art at the forefront with an in-house gallery and an inspiring events schedule ...
But thanks to the sheer number of hotels in London— more than 1,500 as of 2024—there’s truly a stay for every budget and ...
Back in London, Haydn’s Symphony No 104 channels the hectic energy of the city, finishing with a riotous folk-like finale. The Barbican Hall is located within the main Barbican building. Head to Level ...
whose last performance at the Barbican in 2023 was described as “completely engrossing” by The Guardian, celebrates his 85th birthday in April. It's also 51 years since his first London ...
We are within walking distance from a number of London Underground stations, the closest being Barbican, St Paul’s and Moorgate. The nearest train stations are Liverpool Street and Farringdon. Bus ...
The hotel offers accommodation called Solo Plus, Double Plus, and Family rooms. To get to Terminal 3, passengers use the underground walkways that pass through Terminal 2 & 3 Station. Aerotel states, ...
Another Friday evening, another Shostakovich symphony at the Barbican. After the BBC Symphony’s scorching Tenth under Elim Chan last weekend, along comes the Fifth, courtesy of starry international ...
'Are you ready for a bit of Chekhov,' asks Zachary Hart's guitar-toting factory worker, Medvedenko before launching into a Billy Bragg number. It's a meta start to a talent-packed updating of a ...
The play had its second run at the Barbican Centre from November 21 2023 until March 23, 2024. Yorke reported that over 290,000 attendees eventually saw the production at the Barbican.
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or ...
Cate Blanchett is back on the London stage for the first time in six years, playing the feted, self-absorbed, glamorous actress Arkadina in Chekhov’s first theatrical masterpiece The Seagull (1896).
What’s the point of theatre? It’s the question that director Thomas Ostermeier - once the enfant terrible of German theatre, who famously said that directors over 40 should stop working ...