The London Film Festival opens this week with Mangrove, by the Oscar-winning director Steve McQueen. It\u2019s the first in an ambitious five-part film series looking at individual stories about the West Indian Community in London from 1968 to 1985. Anna Smith joins us to review Mangrove, the story of a notorious 1970 prosecution that exposed police harassment of Black Britons, as well as to give us her picks from this year's London Film Festival, and to discuss the news about Cineworld's announcement of the closure of its venues.
Front Row gives the first modern day performance of a lost piece by the great English baroque composer Henry Purcell. The song was recently discovered by Purcell scholar Rebecca Herissone, Professor of Music at Manchester University, who explains the significance of her find.
Grace Jones has had a varied and highly successful career as a model, singer/songwriter and actress, lasting more than four decades. A new exhibition Grace Before Jones at Nottingham Contemporary looks at her life and her achievements. We speak with curator Cedric Fauq.
Presenter Samira Ahmed\nProducer Jerome Weatherald
Purcell\u2019s O That my Grief was performed on Front Row by The English Concert\nAnthony Gregory \u2013 Tenor 1\nHugo Hymas \u2013 Tenor 2\nAshley Riches \u2013 Bass\nKristian Bezuidenhout \u2013 Harpsichord\nJoseph Crouch \u2013 Cello