The ObserverPrince HarryThe early Spanish publication of the memoir reveals a scuffle with William and lost virginity behind a pub
1. Dog bowl fightThe Duke of Sussex alleges he scuffled with his brother at his home in Nottingham Cottage in 2019 when the Prince of Wales called his wife Meghan “difficult”, “rude” and “abrasive”. “Everything happened so fast. Really, really fast. He grabbed me by the collar of my shirt, ripping my necklace, and he knocked me to the floor … I fell on top of the dog’s bowl, which cracked under my back, the pieces of it cutting into me.
StageInterview‘Give us the stage and trust us’: how a British-Somali play became a sell-out smash hitHibaq FarahThe lack of roles for Somali and Muslim women led writer and actor Sabrina Ali to create her own. Her latest play Dugsi Dayz, set in an Islamic study group, has struck a chord with audiences
Writer and actor Sabrina Ali, 25, is in her sunny London flat, remembering a time when she flouted authority as a 13-year-old.
House of Representatives This article is more than 1 month oldHouse votes to formally authorize Biden impeachment inquiryThis article is more than 1 month oldRepublicans have failed to produce evidence showing president financially benefited from family business dealings
The House voted on Wednesday to formally authorize the impeachment inquiry into Joe Biden, even as Republicans have failed to produce evidence showing that the president financially benefited from his family’s business dealings.
Advertising This article is more than 1 year oldMatch.com ad showing woman carrying out subservient tasks banned for being sexistThis article is more than 1 year oldTikTok campaign showed woman making sure football was on TV to ‘make him realise I’m a keeper’
A Match.com ad campaign featuring a woman performing subservient tasks for her partner such as making sure that football is on TV, and ensuring there are a fresh towel and socks ready for after his shower has been banned for being sexist.
JazzObituaryRichard Davis obituaryUS jazz bassist who worked with Van Morrison and Sarah Vaughan and later became a professor of bass at Wisconsin UniversityThere is a powerful undercurrent to Van Morrison’s folk-rock album Astral Weeks that generations of fans may have sensed without knowing it – the coolly sensuous presence of its double bass player and de facto musical director, Richard Davis, who has died aged 93.
Davis was a natural enabler who was uninterested in drawing attention to himself.