Magazine programme on the worlds of arts, literature, film, media and music.
Includes Terry and Bill Jones on Graham Chapman, actor Chiwetel Ejiofor, I Give It a Year.
Ice Age artefacts, Anthony Hopkins as Hitchcock, Antony Sher on Richard III's skeleton.
Harry Hill on his return to stand-up comedy, plus Hollywood actor John C Reilly.
John Wilson reports on Glam! at Tate Liverpool; actor David Morrissey; singer Jake Bugg.
Gael Garc铆a Bernal in Pinochet's Chile, singer Tracey Thorn, and zom-rom-com Warm Bodies.
Ben Affleck, Jonathan Miller on his return to the stage, and the verdict on This Is 40.
Catholic documentary Mea Maxima Culpa reviewed; director Marianne Elliott; Ray Cooney.
Marcel Duchamp, Mark Ravenhill goes running, actor David Oyelowo and dangling storylines.
Creating the title sequence for Skyfall; Picasso's breakthrough year; a Nairobi detective.
Screenwriter Simon Beaufoy, Malian musicians Rokia Traore and Salif Keita, and John Green.
Mark Lawson visits a major exhibition of work by pioneering pop artist Roy Lichtenstein.
Mark Lawson talks to Nicole Kidman and Margaret Forster and reviews the film Cloud Atlas.
A Chorus Line; new film Song for Marion reviewed; footballer Walter Tull's life on stage.
Jackson brothers Jackie, Marlon and Tito; Meera Syal in a new global debt play.
Damien Hirst on humour in art, To the Wonder review, RB Kitaj, Marc Isaacs on The Road.
Sue Perkins, Brett Anderson from Suede, and a review of Richard Gere in Arbitrage.
Claire Foy on playing Lady Macbeth; Dinos Chapman turns to music; eco-horror The Bay.
Joe Wright's stage debut Trelawny of the Wells; author Edith Pearlman; new TV crime dramas
John Wilson talks to Robbie Williams, who reflects on the highs and lows of his career.
Artist Yinka Shonibare, portraying the PM on stage, and UK attitudes to film censorship.
Oz the Great and Powerful; George Benjamin and Martin Crimp on their opera Written on Skin
Side Effects reviewed; Lara Croft's comeback; artist Chuck Close; bomb disposal comedy.
Actor Mark Strong on Welcome to the Punch; comedy duo Anna and Katy; author Tash Aw.
John Wilson assesses David Bowie's music and influence in the light of a new album.