Jonathan Wilson writes about football for the Guardian and Observer, including a weekly column for the Observer. He has written 11 books, including Inverting the Pyramid, and is the editor of The Blizzard. He is the editor of The Football Weekly Book, published by Guardian Faber
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The Seekers singer Judith Durham – a life in pictures Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share via Email The pioneering Australian vocalist, who found worldwide fame in the 1960s as frontwoman for Melbourne folk/pop group the Seekers before going solo, has died aged 79
Judith Durham: a pioneering woman in Australian music Judith Durham, Australian singer and vocalist of the Seekers, dies at 79 Main image: Australian singer Judith Durham in London in February 1971.
The ObserverArtReviewTate Modern, London
Russian artist Kazimir Malevich blazed a trail through modern art with nothing more than shape and colour. Then came StalinKazimir Malevich: revolutionary of Russian art – in pictures
Kazimir Malevich painted his revolutionary Red Square one hundred years ago. It still looks staggeringly new at Tate Modern. Even after a century of abstract art nothing seems quite so radical as this dazzlingly simple form – more parallelogram than square – leaping into scarlet life out of pure white space, tilting eagerly forwards.
Michael Phelps This article is more than 8 years oldMichael Phelps did not want to 'be alive anymore' after DUI arrestThis article is more than 8 years oldOlympian talks about being in ‘a really dark place’ in SI interviewSays he has not drunk alcohol since his arrestMichael Phelps, the American swimmer whose 22 Olympic medals make him the most decorated Olympian of all time, has revealed that he was “in a really dark place” after he was arrested last year for drunk-driving – and admitted to feelings of “not wanting to be alive anymore.
TheatreReviewNoel Coward, LondonJudi Dench and Ben Whishaw were last professionally united as M and Q in Skyfall. They now come together again to play the real-life inspirations for Lewis Carroll's Alice and JM Barrie's Peter Pan. Watching them interact is a genuine, civilised joy. But in all honesty I got more out of the performance and Michael Grandage's production than I did out of John Logan's 90-minute play, which is an elegant literary conceit offering surprisingly few revelations.