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Posts by Andrew Kelly

There’s many great stories here including the time Briggs saw Einstein waiting for a bus in Princeton on a day of no buses and gave him a lift. And also that Briggs liked Are You Being Served and knew Mollie Sugden from schooldays. I hope they discussed Mrs Slocombe’s Pussy together.

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NEW: Astronaut Reid Wiseman shares a video of ‘Earthset’ that was taken with his iPhone

“This is uncropped, uncut with 8x zoom which is quite comparable to the view of the human eye…” Wiseman said.

This has to be the greatest iPhone video of all time.

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Just ordered. Cinematic Immunity looks good for Future City Film Festival work. Richard Brody’s full New Yorker review is here: www.newyorker.com/culture/the-...

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Elvira Notari: Beyond Silence Despite directing hundreds of silent films that captivated audiences from Naples to New York, Elvira Notari was relegated to the margins of film history for half a century. A pioneer of Neapolitan cin...

Looking forward to hosting the panel session following the film 5 May. Later this year I hope to run a season of Naples on film, too.

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2026 Exhibitions #10. Just managed to catch the 40th anniversary exhibition of Show of Strength. What wonderful memories this brought back about a brilliant company led by the visionary Sheila Hannon. Exhibition closed now but Show of Strength has more walks and podcasts: showofstrength.org.uk

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2026 Exhibitions #9: Seurat and the Sea. Another small but perfectly formed exhibition at The Courtauld Gallery.

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Books Read April 2026 #8 Leo Tolstoy: Anna Karenina. Well actually a March and April read. This is the Rosamund Bartlett translation and is a fine read (and as brilliant as everyone says). I’m trying to read a classic a fortnight and focussing on ones I haven’t read. Next up Tolstoy’s Resurrection.

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Books Read April 2026 #7: Adam Sisman: The Indefatigable Asa Briggs. Another solid biography from Sisman. Briggs was important in my university years and due a revisit, particularly his Victorian Cities book. This includes his life at Sussex, and attempts to create a new university experience.

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2026 Watching #81: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. TV series from 1978. Geraldine McEwan splendid as Brodie. Originally planned as a 39-part series it ended after seven. Good example of how regional TV - STV - delivered then. Huge viewing figures compared to now and very good then.

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Enjoyed last week’s session at Toppings Bath with Nicholas Boggs and Maureen Freely on James Baldwin. I read Boggs’ new and important book on Baldwin last year. It’s recommended.

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Terrific first day. Great to see these on the biggest Bristol screen thanks to @swsilents.bsky.social. Day two tomorrow with three films.

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Spending most of the weekend here:

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Books Read April 2026 #5 Eric Price: Boy in the Bath. Life and times of Fleet Street journalist ending up editing Western Daily Press. He didn’t like the (very good) arts page in the early 1960s and the journalists working on that didn’t like him. But he managed to increase circulation massively.

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Books Read April 2026 #6: Sara Wheeler: Jan Morris. Morris was one of the best writers on cities and influential in our city work. Wheeler is a fine travel writer so a good marriage of writer and subject. It’s honest too; Morris always advocated kindness but didn’t fully live up to that belief.

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Books read April 2026 #4: Allan Massie’s A Question of Loyalties. Massie died recently. He was an extraordinary writer, reviewer and columnist and this is, I feel, his masterpiece. One of the best books about the Second World War and its aftermath in France.

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Larry McMurtry’s Tall Tales By questioning the myth of the cowboy, he offered a different kind of legend, one more suited to this country and its contradictions.

This is an excellent review essay of what sounds to be an important biography of Larry McMurtry.

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NYT on volume IV: ‘This is a strange, absorbing, subversively funny literary performance, a deadpan satire of life in a borderless, complacent Europe and an allegory of civilizational stuckness.’

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Visit to Salisbury mostly in the rain so just a few photos. None of the cathedral, alas.

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Festival of Ideas Archive 3: James Baldwin at 100/ Forthcoming Baldwin Event Edson Burton and Andrew Kelly

Latest newsletter looks back at work on James Baldwin in 2024 to mark the publication of Nicholas Boggs’ new book on Baldwin and tonight’s event with him at Toppings Bath. open.substack.com/pub/festival...

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Festival of Ideas Archive 3: James Baldwin at 100/ Forthcoming Baldwin Event Edson Burton and Andrew Kelly

New newsletter reprints two essays from our 2024 project on James Baldwin as Nicholas Boggs new book on Baldwin is published by Bloomsbury. Boggs is in Bath tomorrow night at Toppings.

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Pamela’s book is published by @stickingplacebk.bsky.social which is publishing many interesting books on film and cinema, including in-depth interviews with critics and writers. stickingplacebooks.com

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Books Read April 2026 #3: Pamela Hutchinson: The Curse of Queen Kelly. I love books about individual films and @pamhutch.bsky.social is one of our finest writers on cinema. She tells the whole doomed story through three leading principals: Erich von Stroheim, Gloria Swanson and Joseph P. Kennedy.

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Books Read April 2026 #2: Ian Baruma: Stay Alive: Berlin, 1939–1945. Brilliant book about Berlin in the Second World War in the words of the people who lived through it: resisting, accommodating and simply trying to stay alive.

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2026 Watching #80: The Dawn Patrol (1938). Mixture of derring-do and pointless slaughter in tale of First World War pilots. Journey’s End in the air. Song:

So stand by your glasses steady,
This world is a world of lies
Here’s a toast to the dead already,
...hurrah for the next man that dies!

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Pub landlady blasts 'tight-fisted' Labour MP for only ordering starter Karen Errington, the chef-owner of the Rat Inn in the hamlet of Anick, near the Northumbrian town of Hexham, didn't name the allegedly parsimonious politician.

The Rat Inn is rightly named. This is appalling behaviour. Why be an MP when you face hostility like this? The landlady should be especially ashamed for spying on the mobile phone use.

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Festival of Ideas 6: Happy Birthday Mr Brunel/ Future Projects Andrew Kelly

Latest post looks back at our project on Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 2006. A more optimistic time. And looks forward to more work on Brunel. And it’s also Mr Brunel’s birthday week.

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Isambard spotting in Bristol yesterday.

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Festival of Ideas 6: Happy Birthday Mr Brunel/ Future Projects Andrew Kelly

In my latest newsletter I wish Isambard Kingdom Brunel a happy birthday, look back at Brunel200 launched 20 year’s ago this week and mention the beginning of work on my new book on Brunel and the future.

Subscribe to more in the links in the piece. Just tick no pledge in the subscribe section.

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Some reading for my project on the 1960s.

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A Teenager Plunged to His Death. A Reporter Found More to the Story.

‘Zac is at the center of London Falling. But Keefe situates his death on a bigger canvas: a city that has tried to address its collapsing industrial base by becoming increasingly dependent on oligarch money, and a police force that is woefully underfunded and plagued by complacency and corruption.‘

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