Our weekend arts and culture picks, from The Fabelmans to Happy Valley
Our critics and editors share their expert cultural picks for the next few days

Wondering what to do this weekend? Youâve come to the right place. Welcome to The Independentâs Arts Agenda, our guide to the very best culture to catch up with across your Saturday and Sunday.
Carefully curated by our critics and editors, this round-up features hot tips across the worlds of art, film, TV, theatre, dance, comedy, opera, books and music. Whether youâre after a must-see new production or an under-the-radar gem you might have overlooked, weâve got you covered.
This week, TV editor Ellie Harrison gives the thumbs-up to Jason Segel and Harrison Fordâs new psychotherapy sitcom Shrinking, while arts editor Jessie Thompson says sheâs discovered the joys of reading Barbara Trapido. Film editor Adam White recommends a deeply moving documentary about Nan Goldin, while our chief art critic Mark Hudson highlights the latest first-rate show from Mohammed Sami. Our music editor Roisin OâConnor, meanwhile, has good things to say about Florence and the Machineâs London O2 gig.
Art
Africa Fashion
An exuberant collision of tradition and innovation in Britainâs biggest African fashion showcase to date, with 250 exhibits highlighting interactions with music and the visual arts. From mid-20th-century pioneers to radical designers of today, this groundbreaking show sees the long-marginalised continentâs creativity exploding on all fronts. V&A, until April 16
Alberta Whittle: Dipping Below a Waxing Moon, the Dance Claims Us for Release
Barbados-born, Glasgow-based Whittle delights in dishing painful home truths. Her hard-hitting film for the Scottish pavilion at last yearâs Venice Biennale saw an African praise singer declaiming the genealogies of Black men killed in British police custody. This show, meanwhile, delves into the slave-trading heritage of Bathâs beautiful Holburne Museum. Holburne Museum, Bath, until May 7
Mohammed Sami: The Point O
From asylum-seeking refugee to art-world star. This is the biggest show to date for the 38-year-old Baghdad-born artist, who was a revelation in Mixing It Up, the Haywardâs mammoth 2021 British painting survey. Samiâs eerily quiet, exquisitely rendered images of abandoned installations and deserted cities are suffused with the agony of displacement and loss. Camden Art Centre, until May 28
Mark Hudson, chief art critic

Books
The Gospel of Wellness: Gyms, Gurus, Goop and the False Promise of Self-Care, by Rina Raphael
January is usually a mad fever-dream of desperate aspirations to change oneâs entire physical being, but this year feels a bit different. Most of the people Iâve spoken to arenât setting themselves intimidating health or fitness goals â maybe thatâs because weâre all finally over the thrall of the bloodsucking wellness trend. Rina Raphaelâs new book takes a deep dive into an industry that might actually be making us quite unwell.
Brother of the More Famous Jack, by Barbara Trapido
Barbara Trapidoâs hysterical coming-of-age novel was republished last year to mark its 40th anniversary. Iâm recommending it simply because I stumbled upon it the other day, tweeted about how much I adored it, and was immediately inundated with messages from superfans. The fact I didnât know about it honestly feels like some kind of egregious faux pas, so I wanted to share the love â and recruit a few other new Trapido groupies.
For Thy Great Pain Have Mercy on My Little Pain, by Victoria MacKenzie
The inspiration for Victoria MacKenzieâs debut novel is fascinating: set in the 14th century, itâs about Julian of Norwich and Margery Kempe â the first known female authors of books in English. It tells the little-known story of how womenâs writing began, and is definitely one of the debuts to keep an eye on this year.
Jessie Thompson, arts editor
Film
All the Beauty and the Bloodshed
The work of pioneering photographer Nan Goldin is rooted in its intimacy â the queer joy, the hushed longing, the private pain. This powerful, rousing documentary unpacks her journey from conservative Sixties suburbia to the LGBT+ liberation of Seventies New York. Alongside this, director Laura Poitras follows Goldin in the present day as she wages war against the billionaire Sackler dynasty. The familyâs sponsorship of art galleries and museums long served as a pretty smokescreen to conceal darker interests: they financed and profited from the production and marketing of OxyContin, considered the root cause of Americaâs opioid crisis. In cinemas from Friday 27 Jan

The Fabelmans
Calling Steven Spielbergâs semi-autobiographical coming-of-age drama a âlove letter to cinemaâ â or even a bit of expensive navel-gazing â largely misses the point. This is a moving, beautifully directed film about a family fraying at the seams (Michelle Williams, playing its matriarch, is marvellous), and the teenage son of the clan (Gabriel LaBelleâs Spielberg-surrogate Sammy) finding salvation in creativity. Thereâs a genuinely funny romcom smuggled in here, too, as Jewish Sammy dates a devout â and adorably daffy â Christian girl (Chloe East). Finally arriving in British cinemas, itâs far more affecting and universal than how itâs been sold. In cinemas from Friday 27 Jan
Shotgun Wedding
Nothing speaks more loudly to the shifting whims of fame than Jennifer Coolidge having far more lines in Shotgun Weddingâs trailer than the filmâs actual star, Jennifer Lopez. Fresh from her Golden Globe win for The White Lotus, Coolidge bursts into song and wields a machine gun as Lopezâs mother-in-law, because Prime Video knows what youâre really here to see. Lopez and Josh Duhamel meanwhile play newlyweds whose wedding is hijacked by pirates (!), leading to âhandsome couple setting off explosivesâ hijinks Ă la last yearâs Sandra Bullock/Channing Tatum romcom The Lost City. Streaming on Prime Video from Friday 27 Jan
Adam White, film editor
Music
Live music: Florence and the Machine â O2 Arena, London
Hearing Florence Welch sing is like âwatching an Olympic gymnast perform their most complex routineâ, said The Independentâs live review of Florence + the Machine in 2018. âItâs quite something to watch her skipping and twirling her way across the stage in bare feet in a diaphanous gown of pale pink, with her vivid red hair flying behind her. In his wildest dreams, Dante Gabriel Rossetti couldnât have conjured up such a pre-Raphaelite vision.â With plenty of new material from last yearâs Dance Fever, Welch and her band are bound to leave you in high spirits. At the O2 on 28 January

Album: St Louis Blues â Stephane Grappelli, Django Reinhardt, Quintette du Hot Club de France
This is one of my favourite records of all time. I have a 1964 pressing on vinyl â do find a copy if you can â but itâs also on streaming services including Spotify. Django Reinhardt â the exuberant Gypsy King, whom the late Jeff Beck once called âthe most astonishing guitar player everâ â rewrote the rules of jazz guitar after injuries sustained in a caravan fire left him with two ruined fingers. When he met French-Italian violinist Stephane Grappelli in 1934, a beautiful and lasting friendship was born. Together, they formed le Quintette du Hot Club de France, described by Grappelli as âthe first rock band in the world â I donât know any other group that had three guitars before usâ. There are many things to love about St Louis Blues, not least the sheer dexterity and genius behind the bandâs playing. But what I love most is the fun of it, the playfulness and chemistry thatâs often lacking among contemporary groups. On their rendition of âSweet Georgia Brownâ you hear Reinhardt urging Grappelli on: âOne more, Steph! ... aww, yeah.â QHCF were irrepressible. Let them take you for a spin.
Roisin OâConnor, music editor
Stage
Sound of the Underground
Travis Alabanzaâs 2020 play Overflow, about a trans woman under siege in a nightclub toilet, immediately struck me as a future classic. Their latest, which is âpart play, part raucous cabaret, part workersâ manifestoâ, features eight drag performers and confidently continues that streak of greatness. Read Isobel Lewisâs five-star review in Sundayâs The Week on Stage column â and then nab a ticket before it sells out. Royal Court, until 25 February

The Boys Are Kissing
Recent cuts to Hampstead Theatre have forced it to close its literary department, prompting fears that new voices would lose an important champion within the theatre ecosystem. Theatre503, then, is a venue very much worth supporting if you value fresh new writing, with a valuable role as a launchpad for emerging talents. Its latest production, by Zak Zarafshan, is about the fallout when two nine-year-old boys kiss in a school playground. Theatre503, until 4 February
Noises Off
Michael Fraynâs comedy about the backstage hijinks of a touring theatre company is the gold standard in farce â so much so, itâs a surprise that it doesnât just run in the West End for ever. New productions always pop up at regular intervals though, such as this 40th-anniversary revival, which has transferred to Londonâs Phoenix from Theatre Royal Bath with Tracy-Ann Oberman and Felicity Kendal in the cast. A reliable weekend tonic. Phoenix Theatre, until 11 March
Jessie Thompson, arts editor
TV
Shrinking
After a few years out of the Hollywood spotlight, former romcom king and How I Met Your Mother star Jason Segel fronts this expensive-looking new sitcom about a grieving, pill-popping therapist who has more issues than all his clients combined. Itâs worth tuning in â if only to see a gloriously grumpy Harrison Ford in his first major sitcom role. Apple TV+, out now

Happy Valley
The penultimate episode of Happy Valleyâs last ever season hits screens on Sunday night. Last weekâs episode ended with James Nortonâs prison escapee Tommy Lee Royce donning his Lycra and cycling off into the Yorkshire sunset. Weâve had a peek at what happens next, and letâs just say thereâs a lot more to his master plan. BBC One, 9pm, Sunday 29 January
KSI: In Real Life
Thanks to YouTube, KSI has become one of the biggest stars in the world for Gen Z viewers. This new documentary from Louis Theroux dives into the world of the online icon and rapper, and looks at how a normal kid from Watford built a global media brand from his bedroom. Amazon Prime Video, out now
Ellie Harrison, TV editor
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