From The Testament of Ann Lee to Gorillaz: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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Amanda Seyfried is Shaker all over in a wild period drama, while Damon Albarn and his cartoon cohort return with a polyglot offeringThe Testament of Ann LeeOut now In Mona Fastvold’s critically acclaimed drama, Amanda Seyfried shakes things up as the founder of the restorationist Christian sect the United Society of Believers in Christ’s Second Appearing,More commonly known as the Shakers, the egalitarian ecstatic worship group coalesced round the visionary female leader in the 18th century,Scream 7Out now The Kevin Williamson-scripted Scream films (1, 2, 4) are probably the best in the franchise, and this time he not only writes but directs the antics of Ghostface et al,Neve Campbell, David Arquette, Matthew Lillard and Courteney Cox all make appearances, regardless of whether you thought their characters were dead or not,SirâtOut now In the deserts of southern Morocco, a man searches for his missing daughter, enlisting the help of a group of partygoers who tell of a rave deep in the desert where perhaps she can be found.

Óliver Laxe won the Cannes jury prize for this genre-defying drama, in which rave culture and survival thriller collide.Glasgow film festivalVarious venues, to 8 March The audience-friendly film festival continues, and closes with James McAvoy’s feelgood directorial debut, California Schemin’, based on the true story of the Scottish rappers who successfully pretended (for a while anyway) to be from California.Catherine BrayMGK5 to 12 March; tour starts London The US artist formerly known as Machine Gun Kelly brings his hyper blend of rock, pop and hip-hop to various arenas in support of last year’s Bob Dylan-approved (no, really) Lost Americana album.As subtle as a sledgehammer, expect a cacophony of pummelling riffs, huge choruses and stylised moshing.Michael CraggLondon Symphony Orchestra/Tarmo Peltokoski/Yuja WangBarbican Hall, London, 1 March Finnish 20th-century composer Einojuhani Rautavaara was hugely prolific, but his music is rarely programmed in the UK, which makes megastar pianist Yuja Wang’s performance of his Piano Concerto No 1 with the London SO a hot ticket.

Flora WillsonMarius NesetRonnie Scott’s, London, 4 March Norwegian saxophonist/composer Marius Neset has been a creative firebrand of European jazz since his startling emergence 15 years ago, fusing the flat-out sax power of New York postbop with the ethereal delicacies of the Nordic ambient jazz scene – and his exciting quartet, which includes drum star Anton Eger, is world-class.John FordhamLucy RoseGateshead, 28 February; Manchester, 1 March; London, 4 March; Birmingham, 5 March; Bristol, 6 March After battling health issues, English singer-songwriter Lucy Rose returns to the live circuit for her first tour in seven years.It’s a delayed chance to showcase 2024’s This Ain’t the Way You Go Out album, as well as debuting new songs including January’s undulating Scared of Loving Wild Again.MCRose WylieRoyal Academy of Arts, London, 28 February to 19 April The painter they couldn’t keep down gets free rein to strut her exuberant, unedited stuff.Wylie has a psychedelic sense of colour and a massive comic appetite for life.

Her art is a vibrant carnival.But do all her grand hilarities leave you satisfied or hungover? Drink deep and decide.GiantsNational Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh, to 14 September Look out it’s the Meg! The giant shark, Otodus megalodon, which swam in the world’s oceans from about 23m years ago until 3.6m years ago, is one of the massive creatures this exhibition recreates, using modern models to bring to life the period after the dinosaurs became extinct.Don McCullinThe Holburne Museum, Bath, to 4 May There is an eerie fascination to broken statues.

When ancient Roman sculpture was first excavated in the Renaissance, it was usually restored to make it complete.But gradually people saw the tragic beauty of damaged antiquities.War photographer McCullin’s images of maimed Roman art clearly mirror the modern violence he has seen.Chiharu ShiotaHayward Gallery, London, to 3 May Everyone loves a spectacular installation that plunges you into its world of colour and mystery – I am trying not to use the word “immersive”, but damn, I did.Shiota gathers constellations of real, everyday objects from keys to beds to door frames and tangles them in vast webs of wool.

Jonathan JonesPierre Novellie28 February to 31 May; tour starts Brighton When it comes to back-to-basics observational comedy (no overarching themes, no heartstring-tugging payoff) vanishingly few can outdo this South African-born standup.Novellie’s latest show, You Sit There, I’ll Stand Here, reinvigorates well-worn topics – from dishwasher stacking to airport behaviour to house moves – with meticulously engineered and reliably side-splitting routines.Rachel AroestiBallet Black at 25Linbury theatre, Royal Opera House, London, 3 to 7 March, then touring The 25th anniversary of Cassa Pancho’s Ballet Black is celebrated with a double bill featuring Ingoma, by Mthuthuzeli November, inspired by the 1946 South African miners’ strike, plus a joyful new work for the company by Hope Boykin, who was a longtime dancer with the Alvin Ailey company in New York.Lyndsey WinshipOne DayThe Royal Lyceum, Edinburgh, to 19 April There’s a playful and soulful creative team behind this musical adaptation of David Nicholls’s much-loved novel – with writing from David Greig, direction from Max Webster and music and lyrics from US band Johnnyswim.Actors Jamie Muscato and Sharon Rose bring Dex and Em’s love story to life.

Miriam GillinsonThe Manningtree WitchesMercury theatre, Colchester, 28 February to 14 MarchBased on AK Blakemore’s novel, The Manningtree Witches is set in 1643 Essex and tells the true story of England’s first witchfinder general.But what of the women he killed? From Ava Pickett, whose debut play, 1536, was such a blinder.MGVladimirNetflix, 5 March Rachel Weisz is an English professor who becomes dangerously infatuated with her new colleague (One Day’s Leo Woodall) in this erotic thriller about desire, consent and power dynamics, adapted by Julia May Jonas from her own 2022 novel.John Slattery (Mad Men) and Ellen Robertson complete the cast.Molly vs the MachinesChannel 4, 5 March, 9pm Eight years ago, 14-year-old Molly Russell took her own life.

Ever since, her father, Ian, has been attempting to hold those he believes are responsible – namely, the social media platforms that fed Molly horrific content about suicide – to account.This film documents his efforts while explaining the harm the internet is doing to us all.Young SherlockPrime Video, 4 March Fans of punchy, cheeky period dramas (A Thousand Blows, House of Guinness) can get yet another fix courtesy of Guy Ritchie’s take on Holmes’s adolescent adventures.Starring alongside Colin Firth, Natascha McElhone and his uncle Joseph, Hero Fiennes Tiffin takes on the role of the fledgling detective during his time at Oxford in the 1870s.DTF St LouisSky Atlantic/Now, 2 March, 9pm This quirky murder mystery about midlife sexual liberation in the suburbs features David Harbour as a man whose involvement in a love triangle leads to his death.

Could his wife and closest friend (Linda Cardellini and Jason Bateman, respectively) be responsible? RAPokémon PokopiaSwitch 2; out 5 March If the white-knuckle intensity of the mainline Pokémon games is too spicy for you, this new, relaxing-to-the-point-of-soporific entry in the franchise takes its cues from pottering sims such as Stardew Valley, and tasks you with creating and maintaining the perfect habitats for your coterie of husbanded fuzzballs.MarathonPC, PS5, Xbox; out 5 March Superflops such as Sony’s Concord (which was taken offline after just two weeks) show how risky it can be to birth another shooter into the crowded multiplayer market.The pedigree of Halo and Destiny creator Bungie is at least cause for optimism that this hectic brap-em-up will offer something to woo enough new players.Luke HollandMitski – Nothing’s About to Happen to MeOut now On Mitski’s eighth album, the singer-songwriter, whose single My Love Mine All Mine unexpectedly went viral in 2023, channels the character of a reclusive woman in an unkempt house.In the case of the ballad I’ll Change for You that means dramatically mourning a lost love, while on Where’s My Phone? despair turns to rage.

Gorillaz – The MountainOut now Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett’s virtual band returns with their ninth album, and first on their own label.Featuring songs sung in English, Arabic, Hindi, Spanish and Yoruba by guests including Sparks, Omar Souleyman and Kara Jackson, it’s a typically large-scale trip through various musical genres.Iron & Wine – Hen’s TeethOut now The spectacularly bearded Sam Beam returns with his eighth album of expertly crafted folk, a sibling record of sorts to 2024’s Light Verse.Featuring his touring band, alongside Americana trio I’m With Her, songs such as the elegant Roses and In Your Ocean sound like lost standards.Bruno Mars – The RomanticOut now While it’s been a decade since the pint-sized hitmaker released his solo album 24K Magic, Bruno Mars’s chart ubiquity has barely slackened.

Globe-straddling megahits with Lady Gaga (Die With a Smile) and Rosé (APT.) have paved the way for this new album, featuring recent US No 1, I Just Might.MCNorah Jones Is Playing AlongPodcast Norah Jones’s entertaining series sees the singer paired with a different, genre-spanning musician each week to talk about their creative lives and create a spontaneous cover version in the process.LumoTVlumotv.co.

uk Britain’s streaming service for deaf and sign-language content, LumoTV, is a treasure trove of lesser-known but fascinating programming,Highlights include the music documentary series Deaf Jams and Hold My Hand, a BSL reality dating show,The Women of ISBBC World Service/BBC Sounds, 5 March, 10,32am This moving three-part series follows the ongoing and complex repatriation of the thousands of women and children who lived under the Islamic State caliphate and who are now housed in refugee camps in Syria,Ammar Kalia
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Quarter of healthy years lost to breast cancer are due to lifestyle factors, research finds

More than a quarter of healthy years lost to breast cancer are due to lifestyle factors such as red meat intake and smoking, according to the largest study of its kind.The study, published in the Lancet Oncology, used data from population-based cancer registries to produce a comprehensive analysis of breast cancer and its risk factors.The data used, spanning from 1990 to 2023 from more than 200 countries, was also used to produce forecasts of trends regarding breast cancer up to 2050. In the UK, about one in seven women will develop the disease in their lifetime.New breast cancer cases in women are predicted to rise by a third globally, from 2

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Scotland becomes first UK country to legalise water cremations

Scotland has become the first part of the UK to legalise hydrolysis, an environmentally friendly alternative to cremation or burial, reflecting increasing demand for more sustainable funeral arrangements.Also known as water cremation or aquamation, the process is already available in many parts of the world, and regulations approved by the Scottish parliament on Monday mark the most significant change to funeral law since cremation was introduced in 1902.Replicating the natural process of decomposition that occurs after burial, but over a much shorter period of time, hydrolysis uses a strong alkaline solution to break down the body of the deceased person.The body is immersed in water and 5% alkaline, such as potassium hydroxide, for three to four hours in a pressurised metal cylinder and heated to about 150C (300F).This dissolves the body tissue, leaving only bones, which are then dried and pulverised into white dust

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UK surgeon cleared of antisemitism criticises GMC’s plan to challenge ruling

A surgeon who was cleared by a tribunal of alleged antisemitism and support for terrorism has accused his regulator of seeking a “politically acceptable” outcome after it announced it would appeal against the decision to the high court.Dr Ghassan Abu-Sittah, who gave testimony to the international criminal court on Israel’s assault on Gaza and is the rector of the University of Glasgow, was cleared of misconduct by the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) in January.But the decision to appeal by the General Medical Council (GMC), which brought the case after a complaint by the lobby group UK Lawyers for Israel (UKLFI), means he is trying to crowdfund £150,000 to defend himself again.“When the MPTS rejected the allegations, I felt that a two-year period of continuous harassment and attempts to undermine my credibility, including my evidence before the ICC [international criminal court] and ICJ [international court of justice], had finally come to an end.” said Abu-Sittah

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Labour council accuses minister of ‘moral bankruptcy’ over social care dispute

The housing, communities and local government secretary has been accused by a Labour council of showing “arrogance, indifference and moral bankruptcy” towards children in social care.In an unusually forthright attack, Labour leaders of Hartlepool council said they were “furious and appalled” at Steve Reed after a meeting with him last week. A cross-party delegation had asked the secretary of state for £3m to help alleviate the growing cost of social care.The town in County Durham is one of the most deprived in England. It has the third highest number of children in care per capita in the country

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Most senior council officers in England say building work hit by delays

Almost two-thirds of senior council officers have said they are seeing construction projects delayed, despite the key role of local authorities in creating the wave of new housing and infrastructure promised by Labour.Before Rachel Reeves’s spring forecast on Tuesday, a survey of senior council officers showed that 40% do not think the local authority they work for is well placed to follow through on its construction plans.Local authority finances have been under sustained pressure for more than a decade. Labour recently announced a shake-up of the funding formula for England’s local councils, to redirect resources from affluent parts of the country towards more deprived areas.Among those surveyed, 64% reported project delays, with as many as 94% calling for more certainty about future financing – such as multi-year funding settlements

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Three in four women unaware menopause can trigger new mental illness, poll finds

Nearly three-quarters of UK women do not know menopause can trigger a new mental illness, polling shows.This lack of understanding is so acute that the Royal College of Psychiatrists has launched its first targeted “position statement” to raise awareness about menopause and mental health.A YouGov poll, commissioned by the college, which represents more than 20,000 psychiatrists, found that only 28% of women know a new mental illness can be associated with menopause. In contrast, 93% of women associate menopause with hot flushes and 76% with reduced sex drive.As a result, many women are not seeking or receiving vital help, the RCPsych’s report says