Shiny Happy People!


Early morning, Hannah’s Laneway


A really fun night!


Lovely lunch with Raewyn - looking fabulous!


Nice, Wellington. Quick rain to water the gardens after 13 days, now clearing up for the weekend!


Wellington - late lunch on the Bay


Wellington - A Baker’s Dozen of fabulous days #day13


Exciting that RNZ is now producing original documentary content like this: thespinoff.co.nz/atea/26–1…


Reforming Capitalism

You know its not something to be ignored when people like Baroness Shriti Vadera, who is now chairwoman of Santander UK, said that “the underlying promise of western capitalist economies — that a rising tide lifts all boats — has been broken”. And when Carolyn Fairbairn, director-general of the Confederation of British Industry, said that capitalism had taken a number of “wrong turnings”.

More: www.independent.co.uk/news/busi…

economics #policy


I think summer has come early to Wellington..


No matter your political views, tonight NZ has seen political drama of the highest order.


Alison Moyet - the ‘Other’ tour. Spectacular Show. Great new material and smashing standards.


My library / study / workspace … coming together nicely


Street art - Williamsburg


Delicious final dinner in NYC. All off home to London, Melbourne & Wellington tomorrow.


Literary afternoon - Border by Kapka Kassabova with cheeseboard, prosciutto, dried figs etc. at Bedford Cheese Shop.


Torch Song

2 hour adaptation of Harvey Fierstein’s 3 play trilogy. At the Tony Kiser Theater: 305 West 43rd Street, NYC. “It’s 1979 in New York City and Arnold Beckoff is on a quest for love, purpose and family. He’s fierce in drag and fearless in crisis, and he won’t stop until he achieves the life he desires. Now, Arnold is back…and he’s here to sing you a torch song. The Tony Award®-winning play that forever changed the trajectory of Broadway returns for a new generation.”


Dinner @ Sardi’s before Torch Song


To Be Looked at (from the Other Side of the Glass) with One Eye, Close to, for Almost an Hour. (Marcel Duchamp: 1918). MoMA


Dylan’s next piece…