In case you missed it, here's how the last seven days looked at SteynOnline...
On the night of the 1936 Broadway opening of The Women, its author Clare Boothe Luce – her new surname courtesy of her recent, second, marriage to TIME magazine publisher Henry Luce – escaped to the 102nd floor of the Empire State Building. Her first play, Abide With Me, had been a flop, closing after 36 performances the previous year. She had no intention of being in the audience if it happened again. The Women, like Abide With Me, was inspired by her disastrous first marriage to menswear heir and Olympic skater George Tuttle Brokaw. This time around she found the right approach to the subject – scabrous comedy instead of grisly drama – and The Women ran for over 650 performances despite competing on Broadway with John Gielgud's Hamlet, ...
On this week's episode we mark the centennial of singer-songwriter Dory Previn, and take a longish stroll back to the nineteenth century with her husband André and Frank Sinatra. Plus a diverse range of performers from Tony Bennett and Ann-Margret to Alan Cumming and Diane Keaton...
In a stunning decision issued by the UK Court of Appeals (Civil Division), Mark's former colleague at GB News Laurence "Lozza" Fox has been delivered a sweet victory in a five year long case involving three individuals who falsely accused him of being racist...
Steyn salutes the Brit Wanker Coppers...
Steyn on Palestinian protest in the bright lights of the West End stage...
Laura Rosen Cohen live blogs a truly historic event in Israel...
To which polling station do you go to vote out Larry Ellison or Tony Blair?
The only thing that's surprising is how many people are still surprised: Jews being targeted at a Jewish place of worship on the holiest day in the Jewish calendar? Wow! I didn't see that coming...
Because they made the mistake of sabotaging his escalator and then his prompter, the President of the United States opened up a supersized can of geopolitical whup-ass on the UN General Assembly this week...
Your America Alone thought for the day...
Today's episode was filmed live on the Mark Steyn Iberian Cruise with three of our special guests: Sammy Woodhouse, Samantha Smith and Allison Pearson...
Welcome to Part Six in our new audio adaptation of a favourite book among Steyn readers: America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It. Thank you for all your kind comments about my first ever self-narration of this prescient tome. Chris, a New York member of The Mark Steyn Club, writes: I cannot remember if my copy of America Alone had that fantastic review blurb at the top from the Saudi Ambassador 'The arrogance of Mark Steyn knows no bounds'. Only MS would turn that into a rave review. It was the cover designer who put that in, Chris - just as a placeholder until the editor sent him some blurb from Mark Levin or Michelle Malkin or whoever he'd managed to extract one from. But they sent the artwork to me for approval and I liked ...
Welcome to Part Five in our new audio adaptation of America Alone. In this week's episode, we start by surveying the demographic scene worldwide...
Here we go with Part Four of our new audio adaptation of a favourite book among Steyn readers: America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It...
Welcome to Part Three of Mark's boffo bestseller on demography and its discontents...
Welcome to Part Two of Mark's new audio serialisation of his bestseller America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It...
Part One of Mark's audio adaptation of his demographic blockbuster...
On this week's episode, Mark plays songs from the Continent and from the Commonwealth and (adding a third C) goes all contrapuntal. Plus, as a postscript to last week's show on the songs of Herbert Kretzmer, he presents a special Sinatra Sextet - Kretzmer's Sinatra, or Herbie's Frankie...
An anthem for Teachers' Day from The Sammy Cahn Rhythm'n'Blues Songbook
Mark celebrates the centennial of a great songwriter - Herbert Kretzmer, best known to millions of theatregoers around the world as the lyricist of Les Misérables...
Fall nips the air, and finds Mark musing on autumnal melancholy...
A live Song of the Week with the irrepressible Peter Noone and Herman's Hermits and a great pop song by Les Reed and Geoff Stephens...
Welcome to the conclusion of our seventy-third Tale for Our Time: The Final Problem by Arthur Conan Doyle...
Welcome to the seventy-third audio entertainment in our series Tales for Our Time...
A remote fantastical kingdom far from Europe's chancelleries of power... An unpopular monarch on the eve of his coronation... A ruling class of plotters and would-be usurpers... ...and a gentleman adventurer on holiday. No, not Ruritania in the nineteenth century, but the United Kingdom in the twenty-first...