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Scott Quinnell’s son delights Welsh rugby fans as drag queen Heidi Heights

Sipping coffee in Cardiff Bay during a break from his day job as a personal trainer, Steele Quinnell, a scion of the Quinnell rugby dynasty, is matter of fact about how his path in life has diverged from that of his relatives.His grandfather Derek, father Scott and uncles Craig and Gavin are renowned as literal and figurative giants in Welsh rugby – all well over 6ft tall and fearless on the pitch.Like the other members of his family, Quinnell, 26, is in the public eye, but on a very different stage – as drag queen Heidi Heights, an act he launched in the spring. Earlier this month, the Ffos Las race course, where Quinnell regularly gigs, asked him to give an interview to promote a race weekend, which then exploded online as delighted rugby fans realised there was a plot twist to the Quinnell legacy.“I mean, nothing I said in the interview was bad or wild or anything, but I think I was a bit naive to the fact that it was going to go big … I thought it was just going to be a local thing for the people around the race course

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Embroidering history: the V&A should take a pluralistic approach in the Middle East | Letter

We were interested to see your gallery of pictures from the exhibition Thread Memory: Embroidery from Palestine at V&A Dundee (‘A symbol of Palestinian presence and identity’: the personal and political world of ‘tatreez’ – in pictures, 18 August), having visited the partner exhibit at V&A South Kensington.The tatreez embroidery tradition should indeed be celebrated, but as scholars we are concerned by the failure to use historically correct language, and to recognise the diversity of cultures that existed in the area presented here simply as “Palestine”. Formally speaking, there was no such place in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when several of these objects were produced.The showcase is situated within a larger gallery devoted to the “Islamic Middle East”: a framework that erases the historic presence of Christians and Jews in the region. The V&A possesses interesting Jewish textiles from Iraq, but alas there is no space for them in the section dedicated here to “Ottoman embroidery”

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Susan Sarandon, Whoopi Goldberg and Caliban’s take on The Tempest: the best theatre, comedy and dance of autumn 2025

This musical drama tackles the aftermath of the Lockerbie bombing in 1988, bringing to life the friendships forged between locals from the Scottish borders and the American relatives of those on Pan AM flight 103. Co-produced with the National Theatre of Scotland, and the inaugural show for the reopening of the Citizens theatre’s redeveloped building, it includes 14 actor-singers and a five-piece roots band. Could this be the new Come from Away? Citizens theatre, Glasgow, 9 September-4 October“This ain’t no classic play b*tches.” So reads the advertising tagline to this part spoken-word reimagining of Euripides’s orgiastic ancient drama about a group of women who tear a king to bits. Written by Nima Taleghani, it is the first playwright’s debut to be performed on the Olivier stage and is helmed by Indhu Rubasingham, the National Theatre’s new director

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The Burning Man Orgy Dome: welcome to the latest festival disaster

It featured a tent full of mattresses for one almighty love-in in the Nevada desert. Sadly, the revelries and ‘moresomes’ were not to be ...Name: The Burning Man Orgy Dome

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Olivia De Zilva: the 10 funniest things I have ever seen (on the internet)

As a perpetually lonely child in the planned suburbs of Adelaide, I grew up on the internet. The first memory I have of accessing YouTube was waiting three days for my dial-up internet to load Vanessa Hudgen’s music video for Come Back to Me. It cost my parents a lot of money, but I couldn’t resist the pull of funny cat videos, Sims 2 music videos and early era TMZ. Before I learned how to read novels, I read trash magazines back to front. I didn’t know what a verb was but I could detail a blind item from back to front

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Isabelle Huppert to headline 2026 Adelaide festival in ‘astounding’ role as Mary, Queen of Scots

French screen and stage legend Isabelle Huppert will bring her acclaimed performance as Mary Stuart, AKA Mary, Queen of Scots, to Australia in March as part of an exclusive season for the 2026 Adelaide festival.Mary Said What She Said, a one-woman show created by late theatre luminary Robert Wilson for Théâtre de la Ville in Paris, where it premiered in 2019, stars Huppert as the ill-fated monarch and devout Catholic whose dispute over the English throne with her Protestant cousin Queen Elizabeth I cost her her life.The play, written by novelist Darryl Pinckney, is set in the lead-up to Mary’s execution for treason in 1587 after 19 years in captivity and draws on Stuart’s letters to craft a “testimony” against accusations that she plotted, among other things, to assassinate Queen Elizabeth.Reviewing the show’s UK premiere in 2024, the Guardian critic Claire Armitstead described Huppert’s performance as “astounding”. “Alone on stage for 90 minutes, she performs something between a rite and an elaborate courtly dance, her stylised, repetitive movements and moments of stillness accompanied by Pinckney’s poetic script casting a spell over her audience,” Armitstead wrote