Live Breaking News & Updates on முடக்குதல் ஒன்று

Stay informed with the latest breaking news from முடக்குதல் ஒன்று on our comprehensive webpage. Get up-to-the-minute updates on local events, politics, business, entertainment, and more. Our dedicated team of journalists delivers timely and reliable news, ensuring you're always in the know. Discover firsthand accounts, expert analysis, and exclusive interviews, all in one convenient destination. Don't miss a beat — visit our webpage for real-time breaking news in முடக்குதல் ஒன்று and stay connected to the pulse of your community

Minack Theatre announces first programming of 2021


Cornwall's Minack Theatre has announced its first productions for 2021.
The iconic outdoor venue is planning to open to visitors from 12 April and open its first show on 17 May.
This will be a production of
Then Come the Nightjars by Bea Roberts, set during the foot and mouth epidemic of 2001. It will be performed by Steve Jacobs and Craig Johnson and directed by Minack associate director John Brolly.
Other new productions announced today include
The Cameraman (Bash Street Theatre),
The Canterbury Tales (David Mynne) and
The Further Adventures of Doctor Dolittle (Illyria Theatre). More will be announced in the coming weeks.

Steve-jacobs , Bea-roberts , David-mynne , Craig-johnson , Minack-theatre , Then-come , Bash-street-theatre , Canterbury-tales , Further-adventures , Doctor-dolittle , Illyria-theatre

21st Annual WhatsOnStage Awards from The Turbine Theatre


21st Annual WhatsOnStage Awards live-streamed from The Turbine Theatre
March 14, 2021 Last updated:
March 15, 2021
This was, frankly, mostly a concert with the actual ‘awards’ something of an afterthought: sixteen of the twenty-one winners, or ‘Angels’, were rattled off in less than a minute. Many of the names were recognisable to people in the industry, but nothing else was said about them, or why they were nominated, which frankly felt frustrating and underwhelming, and a missed opportunity to celebrate every winner equally. As ever, the WhatsOnStage Awards featured a large number of musical performances – extracts from plays have never been a feature, though it was nice to see musical productions from outside the London bubble featured.

Berkshire , United-kingdom-general , United-kingdom , Bedford , Borough-of-bedford , Wokingham , Egypt , Penzance , Cornwall , Sydenham , Victoria , Australia

WhatsOnStage Awards: The 21 Angels revealed

WhatsOnStage Awards: The 21 Angels revealed
whatsonstage.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from whatsonstage.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Leicester , United-kingdom , Sydenham , Belfast , Bedford , Borough-of-bedford , Graeme-blackmore , David-ashford , Charlie-morrison , Kristie-winsen , Alex-young , Leontine-hass

'Scamdemic?' - What to do if a loved one falls down the conspiracy theory rabbit hole


Share this article
The violent protest in Dublin last weekend has highlighted the role of coronavirus conspiracy theories in towns and cities across Ireland – but what should you do if a loved one has fallen down the misinformation rabbit hole?
Newstalk reporter Henry McKean met some of those involved in the protest this morning as part of a special report for
The Pat Kenny Show.
He also spoke to Dr Lucy Michael, spokesperson for Fingal Communities Against Racism and Commission Member of the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission.
She told Henry that far-right groups are attempting to radicalise small business owners by preying on the anxiety and isolation caused by coronavirus lockdowns.

Ireland , Dublin , Irish , Lucy-michael , Henry-mckean , Damian-eagers , Bill-gates , Henry-mckean-newstalk , Sam-boal-rollingnews , Pfizer , Facebook , Commission-member-of-the-irish-human-rights

Private investors and network operators step up to fund Fibre-to-the-Home


Pandemic re-calibrates investment thinking on fibre networks
Fibre to the x projects now seen as potential money-spinners
Long-term assets will provide long-term return on investments
Virgin Media in the UK has biggest ever download day? Over 20GB per subscriber
Pre-Covid, demand for broadband connectivity across the world was already intense. Since the pandemic struck that demand has become insatiable. Overall, networks have held up very well and proved resilient to the enormous and increasing strain that has been placed upon them. Network operators responded quickly and responsibly to instantly changed circumstances that would have taken years to accommodate in the course of the usual development cycles had the virus had not struck the global population and changed the course of human history. 

Sao-paulo , Sãpaulo , Brazil , Germany , Munich , Bayern , United-kingdom , Austria , Canada , France , Canadian , German

At home with... film-maker Cathal Nally


Updated / Friday, 26 Feb 2021
11:44
Cathal Nally: "Thankfully I don't suffer from depression . .but I know those that do, so I call or text them from time to time."
"I've been very lucky with the lockdowns", says film director Cathal Nally, whose film Be Good or Be Gone screens at this year's Virgin Media Dublin International Film Festival. "I've spent each one in a different place both physically and mentally."
'Lockdown One’ (the first is always the best) I spent in Ashbourne with my brother. The theory was if one of us became ill the other could look after them. At least that was our view on things at the time. Nobody knew what to expect when the pandemic first hit our shores.

Westmeath , Ireland , Ashbourne , Meath , Ardmore , Kerry , Dublin , Waterford-city , Irish , Patrick-osbourne , David-richard-coe , Paul-kealyn

'Boris is 5 months late' - readers react to end of regional tiers


Boris Johnson
LANCASHIRE Telegraph readers have welcomed Boris Johnson’s idea of a national tier system replacing the regional ones.
The Prime Minister said that a national approach to easing restrictions 'might be better this time round' than regional tiers.
The Government will set out its “road map” for the coming months on February 22, following a review of the lockdown, with March 8 targeted as the earliest possible date for reopening schools and easing other measures.
When the last lockdown ended, England returned to tiered arrangements which restricted the activities permitted in an area depending on the state of the virus.

United-kingdom , London , City-of , British , Matt-hancock , Lee-glover , Audrey-duxbury , Craig-miller , Chris-whitty , Boris-johnson , Facebook , Prime-minister

How to relieve restriction fatigue without breaking the rules


How to relieve restriction fatigue without breaking the rules
30 January 2021 • 7:00am
Where are we going? Everywhere! (Provided that it is accessible by train, tube or car, does not involve international borders and remains firmly within your local area.)
While holiday bans and hotel quarantines have killed off trips of the more exotic kind, one major success of lockdown is lowering what we constitute as “exciting” so effectively as to render a bus ride a hot ticket: twice as many of us are travelling in this lockdown than were in the first, according to new Department of Transport figures. And if that journey concludes at an optician’s, say? Steady on. We might need to spread these hijinks out over another 10 months.

Herefordshire , United-kingdom , Canada , Toronto , Ontario , Alicia-hirter , Joseph-taylor , Stephen-reicher , Gamestop , Professor-stephen-reicher , Independent-sage , Lockdown-one

The home-schoolers juggling work AND teaching: The parents doing the ultimate lockdown balancing act


Advertisement
An A&E doctor has been balancing shifts at a hospital with homeschooling her seven-year-old during the latest coronavirus lockdown - as parents across Britain continue to perform the ultimate lockdown balancing act, MailOnline has revealed. 
One mother has taken to foraging for mushrooms to gain some much needed alone time while a mother of two autistic children has to balance their education with running two businesses.
Parents were plunged into a repeat of Lockdown One when schools shuttered for a second time from Tuesday, January 5, amid a rising number of coronavirus cases.
Last year schools were closed between March and September as the deadly disease ravaged the country. Some 94,000 Britons have died so far with an increase of more than a thousand a day more recently. 

United-kingdom , India , Warlingham , Surrey , France , London , City-of , Staffordshire , Britain , Britons , French , Virginia-hey

'I'm convinced every lump or ache is Covid or cancer': the rise of health anxiety in young people


Vanese Madix has struggled with anxiety in lockdown
Vanese Madix has contacted her GP over 50 times since the beginning of the pandemic and lives in constant fear she has a life-threatening illness.
“I’ve called about a sore rash on my back, an ongoing condition I have with a stuffy nose that makes it difficult to breathe and I even asked for a blood test once because I was feeling weak and tired and couldn’t understand why,” says the 25-year-old writer from East London. “Every tickle or twinge makes me think I've got something life-threateningly wrong. I’ve suffered from anxiety for a number of years but the pandemic has made it so much worse. My main worry is I have some form of life-threatening illness like cancer that has gone undetected. I understand how serious Covid is, but I worry about other illnesses now being missed because of the pressure on the health services.” 

United-kingdom , London , City-of , Becky-spelman , Dave-smithson , Vanese-madix , Jane-mcneill , Sarah-jarvis , Google , Lockdown-one , Anxiety-united-kingdom , Private-therapy-clinic