Hints and tips:
...Peck’s 2020 Rotunda, set to a Nico Muhly commission played live by the Britten Sinfonia, makes a blandly palate-cleansing opener....
...TV journalist Gil Peck — a barely disguised version of Peston himself — is tipped off that a small northern bank has run out of money. Peck tells his audience that there is no need to panic....
...Kevin Bowler, Tourism New Zealand chief executive, says he expects a good 2015-16 as the Hobbit movie will still be current. “After that, film tourism demand may taper,” he says....
...The first act, for example, which commences with a Victorian lad cracking open a book, does not really spring to life until the appearance of Kevin Carolan as the bear Baloo....
...Although there were plenty of original statements dating back to the early 1990s, a number of important witnesses, such as a former non-executive director of Polly Peck International, had died and others...
...Kevin Hellard, a partner at Grant Thornton, who is Mr Nadir’s “trustee” in bankruptcy, has written to the Conservative party, arguing that more than £365,000 of donations came from money stolen from the...
...Conservatives were urged to return the donations by the trustee in Mr Nadir’s bankruptcy, Kevin Hellard, as part of efforts to locate hundreds of millions of pounds since PPI, one of the best known companies...
...Other prosecutions of such cases have resulted in jury acquittals, notably in the SFO cases of Ian and Kevin Maxwell, the sons of disgraced tycoon Robert Maxwell, who were cleared in 1995 of conspiracy to...
...Norbert Leo Butz, who at Second Stage plays Uncle Peck opposite the Li’l Bit of Elizabeth Reaser, lacks an erotic charge....
...Kevin Hellard, a partner with Grant Thornton who is running Mr Nadir’s personal bankruptcy, told the Financial Times he would be seeking to meet Mr Nadir to push for a settlement....
...Less gross-out humour than feared combines with brilliant observation from the leads that makes Harry Enfield’s resentful pubescent (Kevin and Perry Go Large) look crass....
...Mr Peck says that, like IBM and Microsoft before it, Google stands to benefit from the growth of third party companies making use of its expanding array of services and tools....
International Edition