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Wednesday, September 12, 2012

'I've spent most of my dance career sitting on a stool

'I've spent most of my dance career sitting on a stool'

The 33-year-old Dubliner has been confirmed as one of the celebrities battling it out for the title on the new BBC reality series.
And while he’s really excited at learning a few new moves he admitted he’s totally petrified.
Dad Nicky, who has five-year-old twins Rocco and Jay with wife Georgina, laughed: “It feels strange. I mean I’m excited, scared to death. Most of my dance career was spent sitting on a stool with Westlife.
“I’d be quite healthy and I train hard, but if you work hard I think you should play hard so at the weekend it’s all fish and chips and over-indulgence with the takeaways.
“I’ll just have to be more disciplined.”
But he admitted the real challenge will be wearing the garish outfits for the show which starts on Saturday.
The stylish singer quipped: “We were over last week and met all the contestants and wardrobe girls who had plenty of fun putting some stuff on us.
“They made us put on this sequined diamante vest, with no material only diamantes and I thought, you’re never going to see me in that.”
The blonde hunk will put his dance skills to the test against silver Olympic medallist gymnast Louis Smith and gold-winning track cyclist Victoria Pendleton, TV presenters Denise Van Outen and Johnny Ball, Mick Jagger’s ex-wife Jerry Hall, ex-England cricket captain Michael Vaughan, former This Morning presenter Fern Britton, EastEnders actor Sid Owen, James Bond actor Colin Salmon and Girls Aloud babe Kimberley Walsh.
But Nicky said his greatest ambition would’ve been to dance with his all-time favourite mover, Michael Jackson.
He added: “The best dancer of all time is probably Michael Jackson, I’d loved to have danced with him.
“But I don’t know how co-ordinated I am. My earliest memory is the day before I started school when I was four I was knocked down by a guy on a bicycle.
“I wasn’t looking and ran across the road, it wasn’t pretty.
“There was a lot of blood, stitches and the whole shebang. Hopefully there’ll be nothing like that.”
Chart-topping Westlife called it a day earlier in June this year with a farewell tour marking a 14-year career that saw them sell more than 44 MILLION records.
Since then Nicky has been laying low but yesterday the hottie returned to his school in Baldoyle, north Dublin, to launch this year’s Cheerios Childline Breakfast Together Week with some pupil from fifth class.
Thousands of schools, creches, offices and homes will host a breakfast to raise funds for Childline from October 8-14.

Friday, August 17, 2012

Westlife Call Boy-Band Breakup Strange

Westlife Call Boy-Band Breakup 'Strange'

With more than 45 million albums sold worldwide, 14 #1 singles in the United Kingdom and 10 studio albums, fans of Irish boy band Westlife are still in shock that, after 14 years together, the members decided last month to go their separate ways.
Yet, Westlife did not go quietly, having one of their most successful years to date. In May, they were crowned champions of MTV News' Battle of the Boy Bands. Following two weeks of intense matchups and more than 12 million votes, Westlife beat out music's most-famous boy bands to take home the coveted trophy, which is now in their possession.
"Thank you very much. We were very proud, what an amazing thing to win," Westlife member Nicky Byrne said to MTV News via Skype. "It was really really special. It's sitting proudly now in my trophy cabinet amongst a few others we were lucky enough to win."
Last month, Westlife concluded their 12th and final concert tour, the Greatest Hits Tour. Traveling through Asia and Europe, the group celebrated their remarkable career with their fans, ending the trek with a homecoming concert in front of 85,000 fans in Dublin.
"It was a long tour: We did the whole U.K. and wrapped it up in Ireland," Byrne said. "It was the best way we could have expected or wanted to finish. It was two nights in a huge stadium, 85,000 and typical Irish crowd. One night, it rained, and one night, it was sunny, but it didn't dampen any spirits. It was emotional, it was real adrenaline, it was a great night all around."
And even though it's been a few weeks since the tour has wrapped, Byrne admits that it has yet to set in that he will no longer be a part of Westlife.
"It's a bit strange still, obviously. We were together for 14 years. We did a lot of long tours and big tours," he shared. "At the moment, it feels a little bit the same — that you have just wrapped up a big, long tour and you're on time out, but I think every night going to bed or when I wake up first thing in the morning, it just hits you that you keep telling yourself that we are not going to do this again, I'm not going to be back recording with the lads. It's just strange. That's the best way to explain it."
Unfortunately for all those Westlife fans, there was no discussion on the road of getting back together, even if it might have crossed their minds.
"Definitely through the tour, different crowds, different cities, there were times mentally in your head you went and said, 'Is this the right thing?' We never really spoke, that was the funny thing: We never really talked to each other and said, 'Have we made the right decision?' I think our egos wouldn't allow that," he said. "So it was strange when we made the decision, which was probably coming for maybe two years on and off, we felt it, and then once the decision was made, that's the decision now, there's no going back."


 

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Westlife come south - to the big screen

Westlife come south - to the big screen

POPULAR Irish boy band Westlife gave their last performance at Croke Park in Ireland on June 23.
Westlife had a 14-year career in which the band sold more than 45 million albums worldwide and had 14 No 1 hits in the UK alone.
No wonder then that more than 85 000 fans crammed into the stadium to catch a last glimpse of the favourite four crooners.
Well, the money-making continues and we haven’t even reached the DVD stage of the marketing yet.
Westlife – The Final Concert is coming to a cinema screen near you, courtesy of BBC WorldWide.
The commercial arm of the BBC struck a deal with Sony Music and Westlife to co-produce a live film of this last concert and channelled it through alternative content provider BY Experience to screen it at cinemas worldwide.
Tickets to that final concert sold out in five minutes and more than 50 000 additional people attended live screenings across Europe.
Now SA fans can watch the live concert screenings in a cinema.
This concert screening follows the success of the international theatrical screening of Robbie Williams at the Electric Proms and the BBC’s Last Night of the Proms.
When Williams kicked off his comeback in 2009 with an appearance at the Electric Proms, BBC WorldWide licensed the live show to more than 250 screens in 23 countries, setting a Guinness World Record for simultaneous live screenings in cinemas.
That concert was subsequently screened in Australia and SA – the southern hemisphere countries don’t get the live screenings simply because of timing issues.
While many cinephiles will dispute Ster-Kinekor Nouveau’s claim that it shows art films, the “art house” chain does try to deliver alternative content and it regularly screens concerts, opera and theatre productions and documentaries we would not otherwise see.
The positive response from audiences will hopefully see it expanding its range beyond the commercial Hollywood fare local distributors dish up.
The cinematic experience has changed drastically over the past few years as home-viewing digital platforms become more widely available to South Africans.
If the local cinema chains are to survive they need to provide an alternative and better experience than people can have in their living rooms.
This means not only excellent content but also a different experience with all the bells and whistles, such as excellent sound and picture quality beyond what a big TV can deliver.
It also means access for the audience. Whether this means bringing in good African content or building cinemas where the people are, as opposed to only in cosy malls, there is no easy answer to that conundrum.

 

Monday, July 23, 2012

Westlife’s Nicky Byrne says father-in-law

Westlife’s Nicky Byrne says father-in-law Bertie Ahern did his best for country

Westlife singer Nicky Byrne has leapt to the defence of his father-in-law, Bertie Ahern.
Nicky, who married Bertie’s daughter Georgina in 2003, says that the former Taoiseach did his best for the country.
“There’s no big house. There’s no Porsches. There’s no anything like that. It’s not there and if it was, believe you and me, it would have been found,” he told the ‘Sunday Independent’s Life magazine.
He said: “Plenty of people have opinions on Bertie for lots of different reasons but, you know, it’s one of those where he was in power for so long.
“Unfortunately, with the economic crisis that Ireland is in, the whole world is in it, but people will only look at what’s going on in their own backyard.
“I’m sure Bertie probably feels he made some mistakes, but, actually, not many more mistakes than previous people before him. Or people that will make them in the future. Or probably people that are making them presently. But it’s just that he was there at the time.”
The singer also said that he found it sad that his father-in-law was painted as being “corrupt”.
He said: “You just have to hold your head high and say ‘I know him as a person. He’s a lovely guy and he is 100,000% committed – always has been – to Ireland. ‘
“You know that’s the sad part for me. Because out of anyone, some of the stuff that would be painted of him as being like a corrupt politician or anything like that when he enjoys the simple things.
“That would be something that I would know and I think most people around him would know. The way it happened is the way it happened, it can’t be changed.”
Nicky said that Bertie has not spoken about whether the Mahon tribunal fall-out had damaged his legacy and ruined his retirement.
He said: “He’s a very private person and he wouldn’t speak about those things.
“As a son-in-law, married to his daughter, knowing him so well, he was married to that job. There’s not a politician in the country that gave more time and effort.
“I can only look at it from a personal point of view. He did his best. He was there for long, he was popular for long. He did his best. And it’s a real shame how it ended.”
Nicky revealed that his father-in-law dotes on his three young grandchildren.
He said: “He spends a lot of time with Rocco and Jay [Nicky and Georgina’s twin sons] and little Robin [Cecelia Ahern’s daughter]. Bertie’s always stayed loyal to his constituency.
“He was always the type of politician for whom grassroots was the most important thing. So he still lives in Drumcondra, still walks around. He’d have a close-knit social network.”

Monday, July 16, 2012

Westlife perform their last ever gig

It's all over: Westlife perform their last ever gig tonight 

The last ever picture of Westlife together, forever, until tonight 

It's been 14 years, 12 albums and 31 singles, but all dull things must come to an end, and tonight, Westlife do just that.
Shane, Kian, Nicky and Mark will stand up on the key change for the very last time ever, ever, ever (or until a big money reunion tour in a few years time) tonight in Croke Park in Dublin, because they're Irish (they don't mention that much).
Despite their last single Lighthouse only charting at number 33 last year, the band sold out 170,00 tickets over two nights this weekend - with the first of their two last nights ever happening last night. With support from Lawson, The Wanted and Jedward (hang on, are all 170,000 people going to see John and Edward? That'd be embarrassing) they performed all 'their' hits - Flying Without Wings, Uptown Girl, What About Now and World of Our Own last night (and they'll do the same tonight).

"I'm reading through all your tweets & I'm speechless..Everyone giving such nice messages ! Lump in my throat tear in my eye.. Thank You" Nicky tweeted this morning. The rest of the band don't seem to be out of bed yet. Maybe they went out for a few Guinness's post-show ... or they're really into Saturday Kitchen. One or the other.Sadly, last night's show didn't see a surprise appearance by former band member Brian McFadden, who lives in Australia now, having left the band in 2004. Surely someone could have fired up the Tupac-hologram machine to make Brian there in spirit?
Brian wrote on Twitter: "Sending love to my four brothers and there end of era gigs love you forever and so proud of what you and we achieved. Go out with a bang." None of the band replied. Awkward.
Despite Steps, Stone Roses and er, S Club 3 reforming recently, Nicky promises that Westlife won't be back again. "It's not a publicity stunt. Other bands who have breaks know they might come back. We're saying we're not." See you in five years, boys ...
What's next for recently bankrupt Shane Filan, then? Louis Walsh claims he's going to be the "male Adele". Good. We can't wait.

Friday, June 15, 2012

Westlife singer Shane Filan declared bankrupt

The bursting of the Irish property bubble has claimed perhaps its most famous victim: the Westlife singer Shane Filan, who has been declared bankrupt by a British court.
The 32-year-old, whose boyband career gave him a share in the group's estimated £31m fortune, said he was devastated by the move, which happened just days before Westlife play their farewell show in Dublin.
Filan was forced into bankruptcy after the collapse of the property business he owned with his brother Finnbarr. Between them they owed more than €5.5m (£4.45m) to Ulster Bank and Bank of Ireland.
The Westlife singer has followed dozens of other Irish debtors who have sought to use Britain's more liberal bankruptcy laws to wipe out their debts. One financial expert managing the debts of Irish people caught up in the country's property crash told the Guardian he will have helped wipe out €1bn of Irish debt in bankruptcy courts by the end of this summer.
Property prices have slumped dramatically across Ireland – in December 2011 they were 50% lower in Dublin than in the boom year of 2006. The latest figures from the Irish central statistics office revealed that 10% of Irish mortgage holders were unable to repay their loans.
It emerged on Thursday that Filan was declared bankrupt this week at Kingston county court in Surrey, a month after his Irish-based property development company went into receivership.
Filan said in a statement he was forced to make the move after exhausting all other options. "Together with a team of financial and legal experts I have spent months exploring all possible alternatives to bankruptcy but to no avail.
"I have worked long and hard to try to reduce my debts, and I am devastated that it came to this conclusion. I now intend to focus on the remaining dates of the Westlife tour and my commitments to the band before looking to rebuild a future for my wife, my three children and myself."
Westlife, currently on their farewell tour, have had 14 No 1 singles in Britain, including Flying Without Wings and Fool Again, and more than two-dozen top 10 hits. In 2010, the group were estimated to have amassed a £31m fortune after selling more than 44m records.
The group will wind up their 14-year career with a show at Croke Park in Dublin on 23 June. Other celebrities have lost millions after investing in Irish property, included actor Colin Farrell, who lost £3m over the past year, according to the Sunday Times rich list.
Irish people with large debts, such as Filan, are turning to British courts to declare bankruptcy because individuals face only one year in financial purdah. In Ireland the penalties last for 12 years.
The ruling in London means Filan's assets are transferred to an official appointed by the court and used to settle his debts, while he is allowed an income to support himself and any dependants. His name has also been published on Britain's insolvency register which gives details of all individual bankruptcy rulings.
The register describes Filan as a singer and gives his address as Cobham, Surrey. He, with his wife Gillian Walsh and their three children, moved to Britain some time ago.
Filan will be discharged on 11 June 2013. At that point, all debts due to his creditors, including his Irish creditors, will be considered cleared. He will not be able to borrow money or act as a company director until he is discharged.
Just weeks ago, Filan agreed a solo record deal with entertainment company Universal. Their farewell concerts at Dublin's Croke Park stadium on Friday and Saturday are already sold out while the cost of hotel accommodation in the city has soared for next weekend as thousands flock to the Irish capital.

Friday, June 1, 2012

Westlife's final show to be broadcast live in cinemas

Westlife have announced plans to broadcast their final concert live in cinemas.

The boyband's final ever show in Dublin's Croke Park on June 23 will be streamed live to 200 venues across the UK, Ireland, Europe, South Africa and Australia.
BBC Worldwide and content producer By Experience have inked a deal with Sony Music and Westlife to co-produce the live event.

Westlife said in a statement: "Over the past 14 years we were lucky enough to have a pop career that any band or musical artist would have been proud of. During that time we developed and built up an amazing bond with our fans all around the world.

"On June 23rd 2012 we will wrap our musical career as a band with one amazing final show in Croke Park Dublin, Ireland. We're working hard to make it everything we had ever dreamed of from our final concert - a farewell and a homecoming in front of 85,000 fans."

The group added that the gig will be "a hugely emotional night and we expect to have tears in our eyes for nearly every song.

"Westlife has changed our lives and this final night will live on in us all forever."

Salim Mukaddam, Director of Music at BBC Worldwide, said: "Westlife has been a major presence on the pop music landscape for the past 14 years.

"Only 85,000 fans can be present in the stadium, but we're delighted to be able to extend the event to their millions of fans across the UK, Ireland and further afield who can now be part of this incredible event at their local cinema."

The live broadcasts have been organised after the Croke Park concert sold out within five minutes.

Westlife record song for Niamh Curry's funeral

About 300 people have paid tribute to five-year-old Niamh Curry, who died from a rare form of cancer.
Pop stars Westlife recorded a message of condolence and an acoustic version of their Number One hit Unbreakable for the funeral at Kettering Crematorium.
Niamh was well known in the county for her and her family's work campaigning for awareness and funding to treat her neuroblastoma.
Her charity, Niamh's Next Step, attracted support from Westlife.
'Amazing little girl' When news of her death on 20 May was announced on social media networks, the group was so moved they recorded the song and a message that paid tribute to an "amazing little girl" who had been an inspiration.
They said they had been "very sad" to learn of her death.
Niamh was was diagnosed with neuroblastoma in 2010 when she was three. She underwent several bouts of medication, including chemotherapy, radiotherapy and an operation to remove a tumour, but the cancer returned at the end of 2011.
Her family were due to take her to Philadelphia to receive specialist care in September but she developed an infection which gave way to severe pneumonia.

Westlife’s final performance hits the big screen

 

Westlife’s final performance hits the big screen

200 cinemas across the country to take part

AURAL ASSASSINS Westlife have announced that their last ever live performance will be broadcast to cinemas across Europe next month. Jubilation that they will never perform again has been tempered somewhat by news of the satellite link-up, which will make the farewell gig harder to avoid, as well as by the fact that “never” is a euphemism for “until the money is right for a comeback”.
The terminally bland Irish lads appealed to girls of a certain age during the late 1990s and early 2000s, but have been selling steadily fewer records as their demographic has grown up and realised with dismay how utterly shit they are. Other fans simply ended their lives or were committed.
The chillingly titled Greatest Hits tour will grind to a halt in Croke Park, Dublin, on 23 June – the date to put in your diary for not being anywhere near Ireland or in any of 200 cinemas in nine European countries that will be screening the gig. Australia and South Africa may also be in the firing line.
The simul-cast will allow fans the chance to see their idols stand up from their stools for the “very last” time (see above). Non-fans might want to attend just to check they’re really gone and won’t spring up again like some atonal Hollywood zombie with a grudge against music.
“It is bound to be a hugely emotional night and we expect to have tears in our eyes for nearly every song,” the band said in a statement, neatly summing up what the rest of us will be feeling too.
“The show will be beamed to our fans will only add to the excitement… It’s going to be an amazing night, an unmissable show, so make sure you join us!”
In a career spanning 14 years and 14 number ones, their biggest hit – Flying Without Wings – has become a popular choice for deluded talent-show wannabes (hey, if Westlife can do it…). It also a feat that most music-lovers would be delighted to see the band accomplish, perhaps with a leap from a plane at 30,000ft. Now that would be a finale.