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  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-01-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-06-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-07-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as Cameron Mackintoshs Gieldgud Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. The arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-09-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-02-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-05-06-07-2020.jpg
  • A Film industry crew remove camera and sound equipment from a location among members of the public in Kingston town centre, after filming outside in the street, on 13th November 2019, in London, England.
    kingston_journey-17-13-11-2019.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-08-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-03-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as Cameron Mackintoshs Gieldgud Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. The arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-10-06-07-2020.jpg
  • As it is reported that a further 428 people have died with Covid-19 in the UK, the total number of deaths in hospitals and the wider community to 33,614, the wider implications of social distancing in the workplace after lockdown is being widely discussed with the concept of hot desking being a thing of the past. A closed Hot Desking office space in Noel Street, Soho advertises in its window, on 14th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-14-14-05-2020.jpg
  • As it is reported that a further 428 people have died with Covid-19 in the UK, the total number of deaths in hospitals and the wider community to 33,614, the wider implications of social distancing in the workplace after lockdown is being widely discussed with the concept of hot desking being a thing of the past. A closed Hot Desking office space in Noel Street, Soho advertises in its window, on 14th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-13-14-05-2020.jpg
  • As it is reported that a further 428 people have died with Covid-19 in the UK, the total number of deaths in hospitals and the wider community to 33,614, the wider implications of social distancing in the workplace after lockdown is being widely discussed with the concept of hot desking being a thing of the past. A closed Hot Desking office space in Noel Street, Soho welcomes through its doors, on 14th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-15-14-05-2020.jpg
  • As it is reported that a further 428 people have died with Covid-19 in the UK, the total number of deaths in hospitals and the wider community to 33,614, the wider implications of social distancing in the workplace after lockdown is being widely discussed with the concept of hot desking being a thing of the past. A closed Hot Desking office space in Noel Street, Soho welcomes through its doors, on 14th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-16-14-05-2020.jpg
  • As it is reported that a further 428 people have died with Covid-19 in the UK, the total number of deaths in hospitals and the wider community to 33,614, the wider implications of social distancing in the workplace after lockdown is being widely discussed with the concept of hot desking being a thing of the past. A closed Hot Desking office space in Noel Street, Soho advertises in its window, on 14th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-11-14-05-2020.jpg
  • As it is reported that a further 428 people have died with Covid-19 in the UK, the total number of deaths in hospitals and the wider community to 33,614, the wider implications of social distancing in the workplace after lockdown is being widely discussed with the concept of hot desking being a thing of the past. A closed Hot Desking office space in Noel Street, Soho advertises in its window, on 14th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-12-14-05-2020.jpg
  • Make-up and hair stylists ready a model before the couturier Margaret Howell's Fashion Week show in the company's retail flagship and design studio at 34 Wigmore Street, Central London England. The young beauty has her lips dabbed with tissue to stop her lipstick from smudging. The hairdresser pins her braided hair in a whirl on her head and in the background, other freelance stylists busy themselves in the frantically busy room to get the show on the road. Howell is one of Britain's more understated of couture brands alongside more flamboyant personalities. Howell admits to being "inspired by the methods by which something is made .. enjoying the tactile quality of natural fabrics such as tweeds, linen and cotton in a relaxed, natural and lived in look."
    margaret_howell_show101-17-09-2007.jpg
  • It is morning in Kolkata (Calcutta), West Bengal, India and on the streets around the Writers' Building, a busy fruit market is in full swing. Against the wall however, a dying skill is being shown: A man sits with his back to the bustle of the street and is hand-typing letters for those unable to write their own correspondence with his own battered typewriter. Working as a freelance typist, the man transcribes the hand-written words for a customer before the days of home PC or laptop. The Writers' Building (Mahakaran in Bengali) is the secretariat building of the State Government of West Bengal in India. The Writers' Building originally served as the office for writers of the British East India Company, hence the name. Designed by Thomas Lyon in 1780, it received its impressive Corinthian façade, an example of the Neo-Renaissance style, in 1889.
    kolkata01-18-11-1996.jpg
  • After a bleak year of Coronavirus pandemic misery, a contractor applies stars to window glass in Harvey Nichols's Christmas-themed window which urges Londoners to be optimistic for the coming year, on 13th November 2020, in London, England.
    knightsbridge_optimism09-13-11-2020.jpg
  • After a bleak year of Coronavirus pandemic misery, a contractor applies stars to window glass in Harvey Nichols's Christmas-themed window which urges Londoners to be optimistic for the coming year, on 13th November 2020, in London, England.
    knightsbridge_optimism06-13-11-2020.jpg
  • A dog chases crows in front of south London suburban homes with a background of the Shard tower and City office buildings, in Ruskin Park, Lambeth, on 17th September 2020, in London, England.
    ruskin_park04-17-09-2020.jpg
  • A signwriter stands on scaffolding to paint the name a new business on Camberwell green in south London, on 20th August 2020, in London, England. (Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    bus_journey01-20-08-2020.jpg
  • Sheltered by an umbrella held above her head, a woman signwriter artist paints the text of a West End pubs food menu of pies and fish & chips, outside The Porcupine, a traditional British pub on Charing Cross Road, on 17th February 2020, in London, England.
    sign_painter-01-17-02-2020.jpg
  • A Deliveroo rider cycles past large concrete blocks, part of a construction site on the corner of Brook and New Bond Streets, on 6th April 2018, in London, England.
    brook_street-02-06-04-2018.jpg
  • A Lambeth council contractor repairs park railings by welding uprights. With sparks flaring, fall and bounce off the pavement from his equipment on the ground. The man has been employed by Lambeth council to repair the railings that surround Ruskin Park, a public space in this south London borough. The workman uses Oxy-fuel welding (commonly called oxyacetylene welding, oxy welding, or gas welding in the U.S.) and oxy-fuel cutting are processes that use fuel gases and oxygen to weld and cut metals, respectively.
    welder02-19-12-2013_1_1.jpg
  • A dog chases crows in front of south London suburban homes with a background of the city towers and office buildings, in Ruskin Park, Lambeth, on 17th September 2020, in London, England.
    ruskin_park07-17-09-2020.jpg
  • A formal portrait of English journalist David Thomas, after his appointment as the new editor of Punch Magazine, in February 1989, London England. Thomas was Young Journalist of the Year at the age of 24, became a magazine editor at 25 and was the youngest editor in the 150-year history of Punch magazine at 29. Since 1992 he has worked as a freelance author and journalist. He now writes fiction under his own name and as Tom Cain and, as of February 2015, David Churchill.
    david_thomas02-01-06-1989.jpg
  • A formal portrait of English journalist David Thomas, after his appointment as the new editor of Punch Magazine, in February 1989, London England. Thomas was Young Journalist of the Year at the age of 24, became a magazine editor at 25 and was the youngest editor in the 150-year history of Punch magazine at 29. Since 1992 he has worked as a freelance author and journalist. He now writes fiction under his own name and as Tom Cain and, as of February 2015, David Churchill.
    david_thomas01-01-06-1989.jpg
  • Jean-Paul Parma, MKL store Security (freelance)
    9788.jpg
  • Saffron Aldridge is the Women’s Editor of GQ, a contributing editor to Tatler and a freelance writer. She built her profile through modelling, most notably in the campaigns she did for Ralph Lauren.
    _O7F2176.jpg
  • A chunk of prime yellow fin tuna fish steak lies after filleting on a table in a processing factory on the island of Himmafushi, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and having just been line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been encased in ice since being landed at sea to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan butchers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives120-12-11-2007.jpg
  • The head of a freshly-caught yellow fin tuna fish lies inert on a filleting table at a refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcass has been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The filleting is performed by Sri Lankan ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives105-12-11-2007.jpg
  • The tail and sharp barbs of a freshly-caught yellow fin tuna fish lies inert on a filleting table at a refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcass has been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed at sea to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The filleting is performed by Sri Lankan ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw the rest.
    maldives98-12-11-2007.jpg
  • An employee of Cyprea Marine Foods fillets freshly-caught  yellow fin tuna fish at the company's refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan workers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives93-12-11-2007.jpg
  • Two employees of Cyprea Marine Foods fillet freshly-caught  yellow fin tuna fish at the company's refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan workers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives89-12-11-2007.jpg
  • A team of employees of Cyprea Marine Foods fillet freshly-caught yellow fin tuna fish at the company's refrigerated processing factory on Himmafushi island, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth, just line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been in ice since being landed to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan workers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives85-12-11-2007.jpg
  • Nadene Ghouri is a former reporter on BBC radio 5 live reporter, now a freelance. Having begun her career in newspapers, Nadene loves the diversity of working across the different mediums of print, radio and television. Specialising in social affairs and human interest issues, particularly those relating to children and young people, Ghouri believes children's voices too often go unnoticed, especially in developing countries. She lives between London and Afghanistan, a country she has watched fall further into quagmire since her first visit there in 2001. In 2007 she was short-listed for broadcast journalist of the year at the One World Awards for Children of Conflict, a TV series about the lives of children in war zones. At the time this portrait was taken she was proprietor of the Afghan Garden Hotel in Kabul.
    DBEG4579.jpg
  • Nadene Ghouri is a former reporter on BBC radio 5 live reporter, now a freelance. Having begun her career in newspapers, Nadene loves the diversity of working across the different mediums of print, radio and television. Specialising in social affairs and human interest issues, particularly those relating to children and young people, Ghouri believes children's voices too often go unnoticed, especially in developing countries. She lives between London and Afghanistan, a country she has watched fall further into quagmire since her first visit there in 2001. In 2007 she was short-listed for broadcast journalist of the year at the One World Awards for Children of Conflict, a TV series about the lives of children in war zones. At the time this portrait was taken she was proprietor of the Afghan Garden Hotel in Kabul.
    DBEG4578.jpg
  • Nadene Ghouri is a former reporter on BBC radio 5 live reporter, now a freelance. Having begun her career in newspapers, Nadene loves the diversity of working across the different mediums of print, radio and television. Specialising in social affairs and human interest issues, particularly those relating to children and young people, Ghouri believes children's voices too often go unnoticed, especially in developing countries. She lives between London and Afghanistan, a country she has watched fall further into quagmire since her first visit there in 2001. In 2007 she was short-listed for broadcast journalist of the year at the One World Awards for Children of Conflict, a TV series about the lives of children in war zones. At the time this portrait was taken she was proprietor of the Afghan Garden Hotel in Kabul.
    DBEG4575.jpg
  • Nadene Ghouri is a former reporter on BBC radio 5 live reporter, now a freelance. Having begun her career in newspapers, Nadene loves the diversity of working across the different mediums of print, radio and television. Specialising in social affairs and human interest issues, particularly those relating to children and young people, Ghouri believes children's voices too often go unnoticed, especially in developing countries. She lives between London and Afghanistan, a country she has watched fall further into quagmire since her first visit there in 2001. In 2007 she was short-listed for broadcast journalist of the year at the One World Awards for Children of Conflict, a TV series about the lives of children in war zones. At the time this portrait was taken she was proprietor of the Afghan Garden Hotel in Kabul.
    DBEG4468.jpg
  • Nadene Ghouri is a former reporter on BBC radio 5 live reporter, now a freelance. Having begun her career in newspapers, Nadene loves the diversity of working across the different mediums of print, radio and television. Specialising in social affairs and human interest issues, particularly those relating to children and young people, Ghouri believes children's voices too often go unnoticed, especially in developing countries. She lives between London and Afghanistan, a country she has watched fall further into quagmire since her first visit there in 2001. In 2007 she was short-listed for broadcast journalist of the year at the One World Awards for Children of Conflict, a TV series about the lives of children in war zones. At the time this portrait was taken she was proprietor of the Afghan Garden Hotel in Kabul.
    DBEG4460.jpg
  • Nadene Ghouri is a former reporter on BBC radio 5 live reporter, now a freelance. Having begun her career in newspapers, Nadene loves the diversity of working across the different mediums of print, radio and television. Specialising in social affairs and human interest issues, particularly those relating to children and young people, Ghouri believes children's voices too often go unnoticed, especially in developing countries. She lives between London and Afghanistan, a country she has watched fall further into quagmire since her first visit there in 2001. In 2007 she was short-listed for broadcast journalist of the year at the One World Awards for Children of Conflict, a TV series about the lives of children in war zones. At the time this portrait was taken she was proprietor of the Afghan Garden Hotel in Kabul.
    DBEG4455.jpg
  • British writer Lawrence Norfolk in London. Lawrence Norfolk (born 1963) is a British novelist known for historical works with complex plots and intricate detail. His novels also feature an unusually large vocabulary. Though born in London, Norfolk lived in Iraq until 1967 and then in the West Country of England. He read English at King's College London and graduated in 1986. He worked briefly as a teacher and later as a freelance writer for reference-book publishers.
    Lawrence Norfolk.jpg
  • British writer Lawrence Norfolk in London. Lawrence Norfolk (born 1963) is a British novelist known for historical works with complex plots and intricate detail. His novels also feature an unusually large vocabulary. Though born in London, Norfolk lived in Iraq until 1967 and then in the West Country of England. He read English at King's College London and graduated in 1986. He worked briefly as a teacher and later as a freelance writer for reference-book publishers.
    Lawrence Norfolk 01.jpg
  • A tuna fish's sharp yellow fin protrudes from shredded ice at the Cyprea Marine Foods processing factory on Himmafushi Island, Maldives. The 50kg carcasses have been swimming across the Indian Ocean non-stop since birth and having just been line-caught by freelance boat crews who share profits for only high-quality fish that passes stringent health tests. The tuna has been encased in ice since being landed at sea to keep a low-temperature body core so the workers cut out the prime flesh as quickly as possible before boxing the resulting chunks of steak for export by air to Europe and in particular for customers such as UK's Sainsbury's supermarket. The Sri Lankan butchers are ex-fishermen and widowers, having lost their families during the Tsunami. Using extremely sharp knives, they skillfully remove valuable meat and throw away the rest.
    maldives135-12-11-2007.jpg
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