Stories and Songs on today's free French CD, with The Times
According to SAG, average annual income is a mere $52,000 (£26,000) - before agents, lawyers and managers take their cut
The crowd waved Swedish flags to the Abba music that played incessantly for the London film premiere
It's taboo, but it's true. Julianne Moore stars in an incestuous film about the life and savage death of an American socialite
The new cinema baddie looks very familiar. Kevin Maher discovers how British youth can produce terrifying movie moments

That ticket cost is followed by the programme, food and drinks
Enemies Jennifer and Rex face eviction from the house, after their fellow housemates nominated them for Friday's public vote
The winner of television contest The Apprentice has called in sick on his first day working for new boss Sir Alan Sugar
Criminal Justice, the compelling new BBC drama penned by a barrister-turned-writer, is a story of undue process
Lennie James, the star of Channel 4's drama Fallout, talks about the issues it raises about knife crime
Museum says last year was its most successful ever as it attracted 6.04m, with the terracotta warriors a key reason
'Architects take emotions from the streets, the art galleries; they steal,' says the controversial Frenchman
The 6ft 6in version of Antony Gormley’s 65ft original was one of five that he created from a cast of his own body
No one can accuse Tate Britain of failing to make the running with its latest installation - a sprinting woman: plus video
We must not forget that the CIA was formed in an era of civic trust and patriotism
The biology and politics of a true scientific revolution
In the conquest of pre-Christian America, the traffic between late-medieval beliefs and local religions was not all one-way
A new biography of one of the great War Poets reveals him to be an admirable figure
Sign up for our weekly taster of TLS stories and debates
Adriatic villa given to daughters from first marriage but status of American assets left to widow is yet to be settled
Ché Walker brings the tang of contemporary London street life to Shakespeare’s Globe. Sacrilege or spot-on?
Upstairs, Downstairs made Jean Marsh a costume drama queen, a crown she still wears happily, says Bruce Dessau
Part sportsmen, mainly actors, the masked lucha libre wrestlers who are superstars back home hope we will submit too
How a committed Londoner learnt to love life in Northumberland
The newly created Israel was meant to be a sanctuary for Jews after the Holocaust but some found themselves outcasts once again
Even with the best hand in political history, US influence is waning
The Times review by Valerie Grove