Sunday, March 29, 2026

David Chase says Sopranos was born From Family pain


Creator opens up about trauma behind iconic series and new film

David Chase Reflects on Personal Inspiration

March 28, 2026 – David Chase is shedding new light on the deeply personal origins of The Sopranos, revealing that the groundbreaking series was, in part, a way to process painful experiences with his mother.

David Chase on why he wrote The Sopranos: 'I needed help. I needed therapy'


David Chase on why he wrote The Sopranos: 'I needed help. I needed therapy'

This article is more than 6 years old

As his mobster-in-therapy masterpiece is named the best TV of the century, its creator says he was just thrashing out his own issues with his domineering, suffocating mother


Emma Brockes

Monday 16 September 2018



The first image David Chase had in mind for the show that became The Sopranoswas a closeup of Tony Soprano opening his eyes, “waking up for the day”. That scene ended up falling later in the pilot. The opening scene, as any of the show’s superfans will happily inform you, watches Tony eyeing up a sculpture in a therapist’s waiting room with baffled rage. The show is 20 years old this year, and if that makes you feel ancient, “think how I feel,” says creator David Chase, who, at 74, is ferocious looking, with beady black eyes and the intense, long-suffering air of the protagonist whose name has become synonymous with his own.

‘I wrote The Sopranos to get over my mother wishing me dead’: David Chase on his mob masterpiece – and his new LSD epic




David Chase
Interview

‘I wrote The Sopranos to get over my mother wishing me dead’: David Chase on his mob masterpiece – and his new LSD epic


Will the great TV writer ever top his mega hit? He talks us through his new series about the CIA’s attempts to weaponise LSD – and reveals why James Gandolfini called him ‘Satan’

Saturday, March 28, 2026

‘Unapologetically schmaltzy’ / How Love Story became Disney+’s most-streamed drama ever

 


Sarah Pidgeon as Carolyn Bessette and Paul Anthony Kelly as John F Kennedy Jr in Love Story on Disney


‘Unapologetically schmaltzy’: how Love Story became Disney+’s most-streamed drama ever

Series about the lives and deaths of Carolyn Bessette and JFK Jr is ‘prestige television without the usual weight’


Morwenna Ferrier 
Fashion and lifestyle editor
Fri 27 Mar 2026 



The plane vanishes. Families are told. Ashes are scattered. So ends Love Story, Ryan Murphy’s schlocky, glossy nine-part melodrama about the doomed marriage between Carolyn Bessette and John F Kennedy Jr. Yet one thing is clear: the myth of Camelot – or at least this version – still captivates.

John Cooper Clarke / The Bard of Salford

 

John Cooper Clarke


JOHN COOPER CLARKE

THE BARD OF SALFORD

I’M USHERED IN TO A SMALL DRESSING ROOM WHERE JOHN COOPER CLARKE IS BUZZING ABOUT HAVING JUST COME OFFSTAGE, AND PICKING OVER A PLATE OF SANDWICHES WHILE CHATTING TO A COUPLE OF FRIENDS.

Lydia Davis on found material, routines and the distinctions between genres

 

Lydia Davis


Interview: Writer Lydia Davis on found material, routines and the distinctions between genres

A Net for Small Fishes by Lucy Jago review / Darkly compelling debut novel

 


A Net for Small Fishes by Lucy Jago review – darkly compelling debut novel


A woman hanged for her part in a real-life 17th-century scandal narrates a scintillating exploration of female sexuality and class


Alex Preston

Sunday 14 February 2021


A

nne Turner, narrator and heroine of Lucy Jago’s A Net for Small Fishes, feels like she steps straight from the stage of a Jacobean masque. To an extent, she does. Turner, the widow of a London doctor, was a historical figure hanged at Tyburn for her part in the murder of Sir Thomas Overbury. She became an instant celebrity, vilified by contemporary playwrights. Turner was the subject of the anonymous play The Widow, and features in Thomas Middleton and William Rowley’s The World Tossed at Tennis.

Friday, March 27, 2026

Van Gogh’s yellow / More than just a color


Wheatfield with a Reaper' (1889), by Van Gogh.MUSEO VAN GOGH, ÁMSTERDAM (FUNDACIÓN VINCENT VAN GOGH)


Van Gogh’s yellow: more than just a color

The artist’s museum in Amsterdam shows how that tone became a means of expressing emotions and ideas, from warmth to rebellion



Isabel Ferrer
ISABEL FERRER
Amsterdam - MAR 20, 2026 - 15:36 

Color is reflected light, and among all colors, few are as significant as yellow for Vincent van Gogh, who explored its possibilities during his stay in Arles, in the south of France (1888-1889). It was there that he painted the series of “Sunflowers,” five canvases depicting the flowers in a vase. For the artist, who had left behind the darkness of his early period in the Netherlands, the complexity of this hue moved him deeply and led him to associate it with the brilliance of the sun. What it meant to him and his colleagues, and how it served as a symbol of modernity and independence in the literature and fashion of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, are the questions that the exhibition “Yellow: Beyond Van Gogh’s Color,” at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, seeks to answer until May 17.

Julia Fullerton‑Batten’s photographs revive the sets of Hollywood’s golden age


"'The Art of Hollywood' is a return to the era of hand-painted movie backdrops, images that promised everything in a single frame,” explains the photographer. Pictured: 'Palm Springs.'JULIA FULLERTON-BATTEN (INSTITUTE)


Julia Fullerton‑Batten’s photographs revive the sets of Hollywood’s golden age 

The artist gives new life to the hand‑painted backdrops that, before the digital era, served as scenery in films

‘Arms and legs are very expressive, especially with bruises’: the absurdist photography of Yorgos Lanthimos


Interview

‘Arms and legs are very expressive, especially with bruises’: the absurdist photography of Yorgos Lanthimos

Ditched washing machines, a woman’s bare leg, the back of Willem Dafoe’s head … the Oscar-nominated director talks us through his new photography show in Athens – made with his darkroom assistant Emma Stone

Marilyn Monroe by Milton H. Green

 


Marilyn Monroe, 1954
Photographies by Milton Greene 

Chuck Norris

 


Chuck Norris


Thursday, March 26, 2026

Daisy Johnson / ‘I wasn’t a fan of David Szalay, but Flesh is a masterpiece’

 

The Booker-shortlisted author on a momentous teenage encounter with The Bone People, getting a buzz from Peter Høeg’s Miss Smilla, and trying to avoid The Lorax


Daisy Johnson

Friday 13 March 2026


My earliest reading memory
Memories from my childhood are opening up as I read to my own young children at the moment. Something in the pictures of Helen Cooper’s The Bear Under the Stairs or Lane Smith’s The Big Petstakes me back to being four years old and being read to.