Archie Madekwe: “In this day and age, being a person of colour is political”
Taking stock over lockdown, the London actor and advocate has spent the last 12 months helping to provide arts education for young people in the justice system.
Taking stock over lockdown, the London actor and advocate has spent the last 12 months helping to provide arts education for young people in the justice system.
At 23-years-old, he’s set to represent Team GB at Paris 2024 in a brand-spanking-new category: competitive breakdancing.
The London artist has teamed up with Vegyn for her debut project, SHILOH: Lost for Words.
From school to stardom, the 19-year-old actress and Rocks breakout is rising – fast – to the top.
In the fifth of a week-long series, figures from music, art, food, sex work and education look back on a year that shook their fields. Here, the DJ, producer and label boss talks about keeping spirits high while the clubs are closed.
The 27-year-old producer-director powerhouse has proven he’s worth his salt as a director, after creating deeply intimate, dynamic music videos for musician Ms. Carrie Stacks. But there’s plenty more where that came from. And, scene...
In the fourth instalment of our week-long series, figures from music, art, food, sex work and education look back on a year that shook their fields. Here, Ellie Pennick, founder of Guts Gallery, talks us through a year of online exhibitions.
The lawyer turned #Merky Books author put colourism on trial in her debut book, We Are All Birds of Uganda. Here, the 29-year-old shares her most loved fiction and the novels that molded her.
Fifty years of making pictures, upsetting the establishment and sticking two fingers at the easily offended is no easy feat.
Paying homage to Trinidadian carnival culture, the young designer and Fashion East newbie made a sizeable impression with his electrifying London Fashion Week collection debut.
The Kiwi Rekords boss has united a new wave of producers who are determined to deliver feel-good bangers.
We’ve long-seen Britain’s gory gang life played out on screen, and even charting in the Top 40. As for books? Not so much, until Gabriel Krauze – once juggling a criminal career and a university degree – released his ultraviolent debut, Who They Was, last year.
From kicking a football about with his mates, to a starring role in County Lines playing an exploited Class A-dealing teen, the 20-year-old actor is set to take on the film biz.
The 26-year-old actress on her captivating TV debut in Lovers Rock and how working with Steve McQueen and Micheal Ward brought her back to her roots.