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      TV tonight: the last survivor of the Auschwitz women’s orchestra

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 27 January, 2025

    Rare interviews and chilling footage mark 80 years since the liberation of the camp. Plus: Alan Cumming rides in for the US Traitors. Here’s what to watch this evening

    9pm, BBC Two

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      Intimacy coordinators say Blake Lively’s legal dispute shows need for their role

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 27 January, 2025

    Actor has accused Justin Baldoni, co-star and director of It Ends With Us, of sexual harassment in civil action

    The film footage at the centre of Blake Lively’s high-profile legal row proves that intimacy coordination should be considered as necessary on set as organising stunts, leading consultants have said.

    Lively filed a civil complaint against co-star and director Justin Baldoni just before Christmas, accusing him of sexual harassment during the filming of It Ends with Us – a romantic drama released last year. Baldoni denies the claims.

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      ‘We were booed. I felt proud’: Daniel Evans on his rollercoaster journey to RSC supremo

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 27 January, 2025 • 1 minute

    The joint RSC boss is on unstoppable form, making a blistering return to the stage with a 4:48 Psychosis performed in the small hours – and an Edward II that will be a ‘screw you’ to his school bullies

    Daniel Evans, whose sparkling performances in Stephen Sondheim musicals have earned him two Olivier awards and a Tony nomination, has been meaning to get back on stage for some time. Chalk up the delay to little things such as running Sheffield Theatres for seven years, followed by another seven at the Chichester Festival theatre before being appointed co-artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Company with Tamara Harvey in 2023. Aside from a spot of emergency understudying on the RSC’s queer musical western Cowbois, it has been 14 years since Evans acted on stage. Even during his award-laden early years, he would sometimes get home after a performance and think: “Is this it?”

    The 51-year-old sitting in the corner of a London rehearsal room today is singing a different tune. “I had this need to act again,” Evans says. “And I can’t quite explain it.” He looks lean and taut, his head as smooth and shiny as a Belisha beacon. “I started losing my hair in my early 20s. I’ve been shaving it since I was 25.” Wait: he definitely had a healthy mop when he played Peter Pan at the National in 1997 opposite Ian McKellen as Captain Hook. “A wig,” he confides gently, as though breaking bad news to a delicate child.

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      Cynthia Erivo on fame, fear and not fitting in: ‘I’ve never talked about how tough my journey has been’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 27 January, 2025

    She is one of the world’s most acclaimed performers – going stratospheric as Elphaba in the hit film adaptation of Wicked. Now she’s up for a best actress Oscar. What next for Britain’s brightest star?

    I thought I knew everything about Wicked when Cynthia Erivo walked into a meeting room in the Guardian’s London offices. She felt wildly incongruous, way too perfect and vivid for the neutral surrounds, like seeing a princess on an escalator, but I suspect she comes off like that in a lot of rooms.

    Last week, Erivo received an Oscar nomination for best actress for Wicked, one of 10 nominations for the film. Released last November, within one month it had become the highest-grossing movie adaptation of a stage musical in history. Critics had been tipping it to do a double with Gladiator II, in the style of Barbenheimer the year before, with audiences seeing both in a double bill. In the event, it blew Ridley Scott’s film out of the water. Importantly, it is also astronomically magnetic to teenage girls (I have those at home), and do they ever talk.

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      Rachel’s Farm review – an 80s star’s eco project gives us all hope of salvation

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 26 January, 2025 • 1 minute

    Actor Rachel Ward’s sterling efforts to farm sustainably make for an inspiring, charming documentary. It places optimism and energy front and centre

    Hang on – the Rachel in Rachel’s Farm is Rachel Ward?! By heavens, it is! She was the star of the 1983 cassock-ripper The Thorn Birds, which united several countries in pursuit of the question of whether her young, wild Meggie – in the Australian outback to help her aunt run a sheep station – would persuade the local priest (played by 1983’s Richard Chamberlain) to forsake his calling for earthly pleasures. Well, Ward has now forsaken acting for literal earthly pleasures and become a regenerative farmer.

    This charming and inspiring (if slightly rambling) 90-minute film takes us to the smallholding she and her husband, Bryan Brown (yes, him from The Thorn Birds, too! They met on set and have been together ever since!), have used for decades as a holiday escape from their lives in Sydney. It follows their efforts to make the farm ecologically sustainable. She is clearly the driving force, while Brown is happy to go along with everything. “I’m totally supportive,” he says with an easy grin from an easy chair on the porch. “As long as it doesn’t cost me a bundle.”

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      ‘Uncomfortable truths’: controversial film challenges authorship of famous photo

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 26 January, 2025

    The Stringer, which premiered at Sundance, alleges that an incorrect credit was given for iconic ‘Napalm Girl’ picture

    A controversial new documentary that premiered at the Sundance film festival on Saturday night disputes the authorship of one of the most famous press photographs ever taken, challenging 50-plus years of accepted history.

    In The Stringer, directed by Bao Nguyen, a group of journalists and investigators claim that the photograph colloquially known as Napalm Girl – an indelible image of American war in Vietnam that galvanized the anti-war movement in the US – was not taken by Nick Ut, the Associated Press staff photographer long ascribed credit by the news group.

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      Wynne Evans apologises for ‘unacceptable’ sexual remark at Strictly tour launch

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 26 January, 2025

    Welsh opera singer issues statement after remark allegedly aimed at dancer and TV presenter Janette Manrara

    Wynne Evans has apologised for an “inappropriate and unacceptable” sexual remark during the Strictly Come Dancing live tour launch.

    The Welsh opera singer, 52, who is best known for singing the jingle in the Go Compare insurance advertisements, is touring with the live show after competing on the BBC One programme last year.

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      3D-printed “ghost gun” ring comes to my community—and leaves a man dead

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 25 January, 2025 • 1 minute

    It's a truism at this point to say that Americans own a lot of guns. Case in point: This week, a fire chief in rural Alabama stopped to help a driver who had just hit a deer . The two men walked up the driveway of a nearby home. For reasons that remain unclear, a man came out of the house with a gun and started shooting. This was a bad idea on many levels, but most practically because both the fire chief and the driver were also armed . Between the three of them, everyone got shot, the fire chief died, and the man who lived in the home was charged with murder.

    But despite the ease of acquiring legal weapons, a robust black market still exists to traffic in things like "ghost guns" (no serial numbers) and machine gun converters (which make a semi-automatic weapon into an automatic). According to a major new report released this month by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, there was a 1,600 percent increase in the use of privately made "ghost guns" during crimes between 2017 and 2023. Between 2019 and 2023, the seizure of machine gun converters also increased by 784 percent.

    Ars Technica has covered these issues for years , since both "ghost guns" and machine gun converters can be produced using 3D-printed parts, the schematics for which are now widely available online. But you can know about an issue and still be surprised when local prosecutors start talking about black market trafficking rings, inept burglary schemes, murder—and 3D printing operations being run out of a local apartment.

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      Reddit won’t interfere with users revolting against X with subreddit bans

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 22 January, 2025

    Reddit is staying out of the current revolt against social media website X and, to a lesser degree, Meta, on its platform.

    Since Tuesday, hundreds of subreddits have discussed and/or implemented bans against the site formerly called Twitter, as reported by 404 Media . Dozens of subreddits have already agreed to disallow the sharing of any links to X, with moderators (volunteer Reddit users) agreeing to enforce the bans.

    The trend seemed to start among subreddits focused on sports-related topics, like the subreddits for the NFL , the Vancouver Canucks NHL team, and the Liverpool Football Club , as reported by Mashable . However, as of today, subreddits of various topics are discussing X bans . Reddit users in support of X bans like the one instituted by r/londonontario have pointed to various reasoning, including not being able to see tweet links without having an X account, Elon Musk appearing to make a Nazi salute at the presidential inauguration on Monday (as cited by r/Christianity’s and r/newjersey's bans, for example), and general dislike for Musk and/or how he runs X.

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