A novelist whose friends included Dorothy L Sayers and Virginia Woolf, Muriel Jaeger’s name is not so well known or celebrated, possibly because her output was less prolific
Thomas Dunn always believed that he was special, that he would be the one who could make a difference, who could help those in need. Brought up watching
It is the nature of hitch-hiking to be transient; a series of faces, of vehicles, of inconsequential conversations, the road passing by between stop-offs which more than likely
Brian Stimpson, the meticulously organised headmaster of Thomas Tompion Comprehensive School, could be considered clockwise, ahead of his time with the timetables of every student and member of
Broadcast November 17th, 1978, though now largely and understandably sidelined in the larger continuity, the Star Wars Holiday Special was the first television spin-off of the hugely successful
Despite being one of the most reliable of the many genres of cinema in terms of longevity and audience response, horror has always suffered from a perception that
The first of many insights and observations presented in the documentary Making Waves: The Art of Cinematic Sound, is not only one of the most profound and important,
It was in August 1930, aged only forty-seven, that Leonidas Frank Chaney, the “Man of a Thousand Faces” died, the actor, writer and director who appeared in more