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Post your questions for R&B star Jill Scott

In the age of GLP-1s and the deep-plane facelift making dozens of famous women appear perpetually 32 years old, there’s something extra heartening about Pressha, the lead single from three-time Grammy-winner Jill Scott’s sixth album. “I wasn’t the aesthetic / I guess, I guess, I get it / So much pressure to appear just like them / Pretty and cosmetic,” she sings in a coolly unimpressed kiss-off to a former paramour too cowardly to be seen with her in public.It’s typical of the 53-year-old neo-soul superstar’s direct way with singing about femininity – a quality that’s made her an in-demand collaborator with artists including Dr Dre, Pusha T, Will Smith, Common and Kehlani. As well as having several US No 1 albums to her name, Scott is an artist’s artist: her new record features Tierra Whack, JID and Too $hort; she was originally discovered by Questlove back in her spoken-word days before releasing her platinum-certified debut Who Is Jill Scott? Words and Sounds Vol 1 in 2000.As well as music, Scott has maintained a vivid acting career, starring as James Brown’s wife, Deirdre or “Dee Dee”, in the 2014 biopic Get on Up and taking roles in HBO’s adaptation of Alastair McCall Smith’s The No 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency and BET+’s TV adaptation of The First Wives’ Club

about 19 hours ago
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Mindy Meng Wang on the ‘disorienting’ experience of her father’s funeral – and the Chinese cyber-opera it inspired

The guzheng virtuoso remembers being shocked by the traditional ceremony in China’s north-west. Now she’s processing it on stageGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailWhen Mindy Meng Wang’s father died in 2015, the Melbourne-based musician found herself navigating grief while also organising his funeral in her home city in north-western China. It was to be an elaborate, three-day ceremony filled with prescribed rites, including burning paper effigies, ritualised crying and prayer chants.Looking back, Wang describes the experience as “completely shocking and disorienting”. “There were so many rules for what I had to do over those three days, and so many things that I could not understand,” she says

about 20 hours ago
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Hawaii: A Kingdom Crossing Oceans review – a feather-filled thriller full of gods, gourds and ghosts

British Museum, LondonThis retelling of Captain Cook’s death and the merging of two cultures is a trove of miraculously preserved wonders – but beware of the shark-toothed club!Relations between Britain and the Pacific kingdom of Hawaii didn’t get off to a great start. On 14 February 1779 the global explorer James Cook was clubbed and stabbed to death at Hawaii’s Kealakekua Bay in a dispute over a boat: it was a tragedy of cultural misunderstanding that still has anthropologists arguing over its meaning. Cook had previously visited Hawaii and apparently been identified as the god Lono, but didn’t know this. Marshall Sahlins argued that Cook was killed because by coming twice he transgressed the Lono myth, while another anthropologist, Gananath Obeyesekere, attacked him for imposing colonialist assumptions of “native” irrationality on the Hawaiians.It’s a fascinating, contentious debate

1 day ago
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Three board members and board chair resign from Adelaide festival as Randa Abdel-Fattah sends legal notice

The Adelaide festival is facing an unprecedented leadership crisis after three board members resigned this weekend.The journalist Daniela Ritorto, the Adelaide businesswoman Donny Walford and the lawyer Nick Linke stepped down at an extraordinary board meeting on Saturday following the board’s controversial decision to dump the Palestinian Australian author Randa Abdel-Fattah from the 2026 writers’ week program.Separately on Sunday evening, festival board chair Tracey Whiting confirmed that she had decided to resign, “effective immediately”.She did not detail her reasons for resigning, saying only in a statement: “Recent decisions were bound by certain undertakings and my resignation enables the Adelaide Festival, as an organisation, to refresh its leadership and its approach to these circumstances.”“My tenure as Chair has been immensely enjoyable, as has working with the terrific AF team

1 day ago
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Adelaide festival did not dump Jewish columnist from 2024 program despite request from Randa Abdel-Fattah and others

The Adelaide festival board did not dump a Jewish columnist from its 2024 lineup at Adelaide writers’ week, despite being lobbied by a group of 10 academics – including Randa Abdel-Fattah – to do so.On Saturday South Australia’s premier, Peter Malinauskas, claimed that the board had dumped the New York Times pro-Israel columnist Thomas Friedman in 2024, and reiterated his support for the festival board’s decision on Thursday to remove Abdel-Fattah, a Palestinian Australian academic, from this year’s program.“I note the Adelaide Festival also made its own decision to remove a Jewish writer from the Adelaide Writers’ Week program in 2024 in very similar circumstances,” Malinauskas told the Guardian through a spokesperson on Saturday.“I support that decision, and the consistent application of this principle.”On Saturday News Corp publications picked up on the premier’s statement, reporting the apparent inconsistency between the public outcry against Abdel-Fattah’s removal compared with the alleged removal of Friedman two years earlier, which did not ignite the massive boycott the writers’ week is now seeing, making the 2026 event look increasingly untenable

2 days ago
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Eddie Izzard: ‘I once ran 90km in just under 12 hours. That was a tough day’

When you started performing your one-woman Hamlet, how much did you labour over your delivery of the play’s most iconic lines, such as “To be or not to be”?The first thing I found when I was rehearsing Hamlet was that I felt very at home. I thought, “That’s unusual – I should be quaking in my boots!” I just felt very at ease and happy to be there. But the first time I performed “to be or not to be” on stage, there was a sense of – aren’t bells supposed to ring here? Isn’t there supposed to be a klaxon?I come to “to be” in a slightly different way each night so hopefully the audience haven’t seen it done that way before. I was a street performer for years, so I know how to talk to an audience, which is what they were doing in Shakespeare’s time; they were performing to the people, not at them. Actors got into this fourth-wall thing in the 1800s, it wasn’t there in Elizabethan times

3 days ago
societySee all
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Man who infected woman with HIV after stopping treatment is jailed

about 19 hours ago
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I loved my teaching job. But as a trans man in Texas, quitting was the only way to get my dignity back

about 20 hours ago
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HMRC accepted ‘tolerable’ risk of harm in child benefit fraud crackdown

about 23 hours ago
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People put off giving CPR by unrealistic TV depictions, researchers say

about 24 hours ago
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Guardian Hope appeal raises £950,000 for charities tackling racism and division

1 day ago
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Mattel launches its first autistic Barbie

1 day ago

Nick Kyrgios delights rowdy fan base as tennis cultures clash at Kooyong Classic | Jack Snape

about 3 hours ago
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The sign at the Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club reads “dress code applies”, but on Tuesday the rules were relaxed.Thousands from all walks of life streamed into the leafy grounds in Melbourne’s inner east to enjoy the first day of the Kooyong Classic, where Nick Kyrgios brought his own brand of tennis to the storied Australian Open warmup event.The 30-year-old announced on Friday he would not be playing singles at Melbourne Park, but he had already committed to Kooyong as he works his way back into shape.So under cloudy skies in Melbourne’s mid-afternoon, he found himself across the net from Chinese former world No 31 Zhang Zhizhen, now ranked 362, and returning from injury himself.Kooyong Lawn Tennis Club was the home of the Australian Open between 1972 and 1987 and is – outside Wimbledon – a bastion of tennis’s grasscourt traditions.

Learner Tien, the 20-year-old American who has quickly climbed the rankings, admitted after his earlier match he had never seen as many grass courts in one place, outside SW19.Grass is not the only tradition Kooyong upholds.As one of the institutions of Melbourne’s establishment, this is a place steeped in standards, sportsmanship and respect.So when, before the match, one of dozens of preteen boys in attendance screamed at Kyrgios, “can I have your racket?” it appeared this was no ordinary Tuesday down at the club.Beneath the summer dresses and linen pastels of a fashion-conscious crowd, Kyrgios entered the arena, with eyes fixed on what he was – and wasn’t – wearing.

In a doubles defeat last week in Brisbane he had strapping on his elbow and knee, an indication his recovery was still a work in progress.But in Melbourne these were gone.And rather than the grimace of Brisbane, the Australian wore a smile.It helped the match appeared to be going his way.Winning 90% of points on first serve secured him a first set.

Shortly after, he produced a tweener to the delight of the squealing youngsters.In losing the point, Kyrgios even kept the traditionalists happy.While the Australian Open pursues a futuristic vision for tennis, mixed with entertainment, music and technology, Kooyong – just 8km to the east – is a throwback.The main arena was refurbished in 2019 to create a boutique, 6,000-person capacity stadium harking back to the site’s traditional aesthetic.Pat Cash is an official ambassador for the tournament and its first winner, but has a long connection to the place.

“I had my first tennis lesson here,” he said.“I’m back here still 50 years later, still at the club.” He said he had seen it change over the years, including a shift from grass to hardcourt in the main arena, “which is a bit sad”.But he otherwise beamed when talking about the outlook from the balcony, saying it was “one of the most spectacular views you can have in tennis”.To underscore the history of the place, 98-year-old Frank Sedgman – a five-time grand slam winner, the last in 1952 – tossed the coin at the start of the day.

By the time Kyrgios began to turn up the showmanship in the second set, Sedgman was nowhere to be seen.Kyrgios broke back at 3-5, running to his seat and leaning back, slowly crossing his legs in mocking ease.The crowd enjoyed the stagecraft so much, the Australian crossed them again.But he was not yet comfortable, and lost the set the following game.It set up a grandstand finish for the rowdy crowd in the deciding match tiebreak.

As the score nudged its way to 6-7, the preteens in attendance roared their delight.Kyrgios ultimately prevailed 6-3 4-6 11-9, dropping to the ground in triumph heavy on the theatrics amid generous applause, even if few will remember the result.Perhaps more enduring was what followed.A basketball hoop was wheeled out on to the historic home of Australian tennis and Kyrgios, Zhang – one of the game’s key attractions in its expanding market in China – and a fan traded shots in a stage-managed game of horse.Over the shrieks of young fans, Kyrgios said afterwards the promise that was evident in his performance gave him mixed feelings: “In one sense it’s amazing, in the other sense it is a bit heartbreaking, because you know that I’m not really able to go out there and do what I used to do.

”He will now take part in Wednesday’s One Point Slam at Melbourne Park, and plans to play men’s doubles and potentially mixed doubles at the Australian Open.Looking ahead, Kyrgios has no plans to play Roland Garros, but Wimbledon – where he reached the men’s singles final in 2022 – was “a bit easier physically” and will be a target for his coming months of training.“If I didn’t have this, like, I don’t know what else I’d do.Like, really, let’s be honest,” he said.“I’ve got a lot of things going off court, but there’s no feeling like this, with the kids and the youth.

I’m just trying to be a good role model and show that someone like me is able to still have fun, no matter what you look like or where you come from.”