Under the radar

September 24, 2005
  • Rambert Dance Company, purveyors of the sleekest contemporary dance, starts its autumn tour at the Lowry, Salford on 21st September, with a programme that includes Mark Baldwin's physics-inspired Constant Speed and new work by Rafael Bonachela.


  • Hideko Inoue raids her grandfather's photograph albums for ideas, while Samuel Herbert paints Victorian colonists. Both are included in When I Lived in Modern Times, an exhibition of art drawn from archives, at the Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art, Sunderland, from 16th September.


  • Northern Ballet Theatre's David Nixon is at his thrilling best when choreographing big, mythic stories. His latest ballet, Dracula, premieres at the West Yorkshire Playhouse, Leeds, from 2nd September.


  • The story of Drum, South Africa's first black magazine, is dramatised in Who Killed Mr Drum?, a new play by up-and-coming playwright Fraser Grace and former Drum editor Sylvester Stein, at the Riverside Studios, London, now.


  • Letters that children wrote to Albert Einstein about his unruly hair sit alongside his correspondence with Roosevelt in Man of the Century at London's Jewish Museum, from 15th September.