The Spectator
29 April 2023 Aus
The Adventures of Barry Humphries
Australia
A conservative contrarian
Sensibly, the late Barry Humphries allowed the political leanings of himself and his alter-egos to remain camouflaged within their biting…
Australian Columnists
Brown study
Anthony Albanese and his acolytes have been cock-a hoop over the Solicitor-General’s opinion on the Voice. They are ecstatic that…
Australian notes
Major problems with the Voice referendum are plain to see: even some of its prominent supporters question its chances of…
Australian Features
Embrace the grandeur of the coronation
Charles, Christianity and multiculturalism
The Adventures of Barry Humphries
Part One. The Adventures of Barry McKenzie (1971) The first Barry McKenzie film was, as everyone knows, based on a…
Portrait of a friend
It is true to say that memories of the departed become much more vivid when they are gone – more…
Features
‘Everything is going to be turned upside down’
Michio Kaku on the new world of quantum computing
The Week
Eclipses and revolutions
The fiasco in Khartoum is being widely interpreted as a tragic failure of intelligence. James Cleverly, the Foreign Secretary, is…
Columnists
Anti-Semitism will never go away
One of the best ways to work out that somebody has not thought deeply about anti-Semitism is if they say…
The delicious doublethink of Diane Abbott
I thought I had forgotten about Diane Abbott, but in fact there has been a Diane-sized hole in my life…
Is Trump America’s Le Pen?
‘Democracy,’ said H.L. Mencken, ‘is a pathetic belief in the collective wisdom of individual ignorance.’ As we approach 2024, America…
Why I’ve come to think the NHS is broken
I was having tea with my neighbour in her second-floor flat when a man, a stranger, appeared in the room.…
Books
A chilling childhood
Growing up in New England, in a town simmering with menace, Ruthie suffers the agonies of parental neglect
Wasting away
Aged 14, Hadley Freeman succumbed to it, and was offered many conflicting explanations. She herself finally attributes it to a fear of approaching womanhood
Saving their own skins
Ian Buruma describes three individuals who saved themselves in wartime by betraying others. But none was a ‘typical traitor’, or essentially different from the rest of us
Adieu to Indochina
Vuillard’s powerful novel analyses the French army’s humiliation in 1954 at the siege of Dien Bien Phu, and the motivations of the principal players
Sex, drugs and celluloid
Rainer Werner Fassbinder made 43 highly original films, and was planning another when he died – at the same age, and in the same way, as his idol
A naturally conservative country
Their winning formula has been to present themselves as the party of patriotism and economic competence, while stealing the opposition’s clothes whenever it suited them
Maligned insects
Katty Baird braves the cliffs and wind-blasted moors of East Lothian to identify as many species of these maligned insects as possible
A magnificent melting pot
Central Europe has shaped our history for centuries – but will the West always find it baffling, wonders Peter Frankopan
Arts
The preternatural nature of his genius
Is it being a dominion country, a well-heeled colony, that makes this country good at comedy? The death of Barry…
Nuttier and nastier
I was making my way slowly through one of my dismally prosaic little to-do lists – ‘pay the water bill’…
Vaudeville villainy
Tetris is a righteously entertaining movie about the stampede to secure the rights from within the Soviet Union to what…
Americana Coldplay
Once upon a time, rock bands wished for nothing more than to look as though they posed a clear and…
The yin and yang of abstraction
In July 1928, an unknown Swedish woman artist mounted a solo show of her revolutionary abstract paintings at the World…
Deadbeats, halfwits and losers
Snowflakes, an excellent title, rehashes The Dumb Waiter by Harold Pinter. A guest in a hotel room is visited by…
Heavenly creatures
Yes, yes, I know. You’ve had your fill of David Attenborough’s jeremiads, you’ve heard enough already about climate change catastrophe.…
To be a pilgrim
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry is an excellent adaptation of Rachel Joyce’s bestselling novel (2012) about a retired old…
Great Dane
Robert Gore-Langton on John Gielgud and Richard Burton’s fraught, botched, triumphant Hamlet
Life
Aussie life
One of the few survivors of Gough Whitlam’s Camelot, that legendary cultural icon and eminent Australian diplomat, Sir Les Patterson,…
Language
The word ‘mulligan’ is new to me – but golfers everywhere will find it familiar. In golf a ‘mulligan’ is…
Yorkshire pudding
My mother, a Yorkshire woman, would occasionally take shortcuts in the kitchen, but not when it came to a roast,…
Fat of the land
Lady Bamford’s Cotswold fairy-land Daylesford Farm has sprouted leaves. It is no longer a farm shop, which should be a…
Man of the moment – or not
What’s not to love about David de Gea? Manchester United’s goalkeeper might appear to have it all: a humongous salary,…
My blue tick humiliation
I was one of the first people to take up Elon Musk’s offer to purchase a blue tick, the Twitter…
Triple time
In Competition No. 3296, you were invited to provide a poem whose rhyme words are all at least three syllables.…









































































