Robin Williams video goes global


Robin Williams’ final message of hope to terminally ill North Auckland woman Vivian Waller has hit headlines across the world.

The story about the 21-year-old receiving a short personal message from the late actor has been featured on television and radio stations, as well as headlines in the United States, UK, Germany, Scotland, Argentina, Canada, France, Lebanon and the Netherlands.

The New York Daily News featured Vivian and husband Jack on the front page, along with interview requests coming from ABC News and Entertainment Tonight.

The Mirror, Huffington Post, The Telegraph, Vanity Fair, CBS and even US celebrity Ryan Seacrest have featured the story in publications and online.

Jack says he is surprised at the reaction of so many. He and Viv are trying to stay out of the spotlight.

”I can only hope that it’s a reminder to everyone how great Robin Williams was.”

> Share this story on Facebook.

The couple’s Facebook page is fielding comments from across the globe.

Lisa Diem-Moore writes: ”Watched from Pennsylvania, USA, sending prayers to you and your family!”

Kelly Smoak says, ”I just saw the article on Buzzfeed. Thank you for sharing this wonderful video of a man we all love so much. I will be keeping up with your journey from South Carolina, USA. God bless.”

A message from Julian Robert Dean in South Wales: ”Have read your article and seen the lovely video from Robin Williams, sending you and your family love and prayers from Ynyshir, The Rhondda Fach, South Wales. Wishing you love and sending you hugs.”

Other cancer fighters have also responded with messages of hope for Vivian.

Alex James Meseck writes: ”Saw the video and loved. Sending best wishes and prayers. As a childhood cancer survivor, I can understand how you’re feeling.

“As I’ve met more and more people with cancer, I’ve come to learn that terminal cancer can be beaten. Good luck and know you have many people praying for you.”

Ad Feedback

– Stuff

Share

Lesley Garrett takes on the habit


The Sound of Music, heading for Wellington, has had more than a little to do with the life and career of its British co-star, Lesley Garrett.

Garrett, 59, first played the role of Mother Abbess in 2006 at the start of the production’s London run.

It was her first foray into musicals after a long career as an opera singer. She sounded out the possibility of the role with a friend, who had a word with Andrew Lloyd Webber, the man in charge. Then she donned the habit and was a hit at the London Palladium – and with the critics.

But her first brush with the long-running musical was much earlier.

“I was a little child in the 1960s and saw The Sound of Music and fell in love with it, particularly Mother Abbess. The song about climbing the mountain was the apex – climbing every mountain, getting to the top of the mountain, and the mountain of the show. It was a pivotal moment, the power of that, on me. It blew me away, the woman with the power, the Mother Abbess. I longed to play it all my life.”

Garrett is returning to the role for New Zealand just because, she says, “I wanted to come to New Zealand. I’ve been there 10 years ago to promote an album for a day and now my children are both at university, I can travel more, and we have Skype.”

So she’ll put on the habit and do it all again, remembering that her first time in the role “was possibly the highlight of my life”, not just, she says, because the show was so successful.

“I loved the role and the production. I just feel better when I play this character. I feel like I’m a better human being. I put this wonderful habit on and it makes me feel good about the world.”

Climb Ev’ry Mountain seems as much an analogy of her life as a song title. Her story seems to be one of rags to riches but, she says, it’s not at all.

“My childhood was rich in family and music.”

She was born in Yorkshire “and the whole area was industrial with pits and factories but they all had bands and choirs . . . That’s all we had. There was no telly.”

Her father was a railway signalman and her mother a seamstress: both were musically adept.

“When I was 7 or 8 they went into education. My father went to night school and to training college and ended up headmaster of a Sheffield school.”

Ad Feedback

Her mother became a teacher and a school head of music.

“I saw my parents climb that mountain and that was truly inspiring.”

She grew up with an eclectic mix of music and knew, at 15, that, if her parents could do what they did, she could be an opera singer. The epiphany came when an aunt took her to see her first opera. Dressed in their best, they watched the English National Opera – where she would later become lead soprano – perform Madame Butterfly.

“When I got home I went to the headmistress and said I wanted to be a singer.”

She had been studying science but the headmistress was not surprised. “She juggled timetables so I could do an A-level in music and I got into the royal academy and the rest is history. The ball kept rolling.”

She became a star in the opera and television world. She was lead soprano at the English National Opera for a decade from 1984, has recorded 14 solo CDs, had many television appearances and several shows, and was an early participant in Strictly Come Dancing.

Everything, she says, eventually had to fit in with her family life. She was well into her 30s when she met and married her doctor husband, Peter, in 1990.

Friends brought him to see her sing at a time when she had given up on the idea of finding a life partner and having a family – “I’d auditioned the world and he just wasn’t out there”. They went out to dinner, and that was another “the rest is history”.

It was, she says, quite genuinely, love at first sight. “We have two gorgeous children, a precious thing I never thought would happen.

“I gave up on international work once the children were born but I had some residual contracts.”

One took her to St Louis on an American tour on her daughter’s first birthday. She was singing Tchaikovsky’s None but the Lonely Heart when she burst into tears. “I told them I was very sorry, they were lovely, but it was my little girl’s birthday and I should be there. Those lovely American people gave me a standing ovation.”

When she was committed to overseas performances, she tried to take the children.

“I took them to Australia and we made it a family holiday. I couldn’t bear to be away from them. Family is more important than career. All the decisions I’ve made, I’ve made around family, to care for them. Singing is a priority too, but I can sing anywhere.

“You can only be as happy as your most unhappy child and that goes for the rest of your life. For me it was a no-brainer. If I’d been away, they would have been unhappy.”

She says her career has been “a fantastic journey” and at nearly 60, she is still travelling it. “I think it’s a case of ‘if you don’t use it, you lose it’.”

Not losing it takes discipline.

“I have singing lessons every week which keeps me vocally fit. Vocal hygiene is a whole area on its own.”

She needs to drink plenty of water, keep out of dusty or otherwise dubious atmospheres, and be careful with what she eats – “not too much coffee or spicy foods which might give reflux during the night”.

“And not too much talking.” She needs to keep generally fit.

“It’s all part of my routine. If I go on holiday for two weeks my voice feels affected. I can have a week but any longer and I’m in trouble. I haven’t noticed it get harder as I get older. If anything it’s a bit easier, my voice knows how to behave. It took me a long time to get my routine together.”

Music, she says, is like “eating and breathing, a powerful natural urge” and brings her fulfilment and a sense of power.

“Singing gives me the spiritual connection to the very heart of myself. It’s so holistic, when you sing.

“It’s an intensely physical activity but it connects my heart, my brain and my spirit, all the elements of what I am, never more so than when I’m playing Mother Abbess. I bless the day I was asked to play that role.”

Share

TVNZ apologises for condom ad during Consent


Although some critics panned rugby drama The Kick, it was watched by more people than the critically acclaimed Consent: The Louise Nicholas Story.

The Kick, a dramatisation of the 2011 Rugby World Cup and Stephen “Beaver” Donald’s story, brought in an audience of 412,000 when it played on August 10, a TVNZ spokeswoman said.

It has also been viewed 30,000 on demand.

Some described some of the casting in the film as “bizarre” and the dialogue as “forced”.

A week later, Consent: The Louise Nicholas Story played and drew an audience of 305,000, she said.

It was too early to gather on-demand figures for Consent.

Critics hailed it as a “brilliant” and a “masterclass in sensitivity”.

Both films were the highest-rating shows in their time slots.

TVNZ also came under fire online for screening an advertisement for Skyn condoms during Consent, which featured a woman in her underwear saying how much she enjoyed sex.

Jill Smith wrote on TV One’s Facebook page: “Incredible woman. Pity about that condom ad during the break. Shows bloody bad taste on your part.”

The sentiment was echoed by others and forced an apology from TVNZ.

“We apologise for broadcasting a condom ad in last night’s [Sunday] screening of Consent on TV One.

“It was in the wrong place at the wrong time.

“We are very sorry that we didn’t pick this up before it went to air.”

TVNZ said human error led to the programme’s subject matter not being taken into account when the advertisement was placed.

“It wasn’t a deliberate decision.

“The fault was ours and it shouldn’t have happened.

“We are reviewing our ad-booking processes as a result.”

Ad Feedback

– Stuff

Share

Kimbra’s The Golden Echo

Share

Lesley Garrett


The Sound of Music, heading for Wellington, has had more than a little to do with the life and career of its British co-star, Lesley Garrett.

Garrett, 59, first played the role of Mother Abbess in 2006 at the start of the production’s London run.

It was her first foray into musicals after a long career as an opera singer. She sounded out the possibility of the role with a friend, who had a word with Andrew Lloyd Webber, the man in charge. Then she donned the habit and was a hit at the London Palladium – and with the critics.

But her first brush with the long-running musical was much earlier.

“I was a little child in the 1960s and saw The Sound of Music and fell in love with it, particularly Mother Abbess. The song about climbing the mountain was the apex – climbing every mountain, getting to the top of the mountain, and the mountain of the show. It was a pivotal moment, the power of that, on me. It blew me away, the woman with the power, the Mother Abbess. I longed to play it all my life.”

Garrett is returning to the role for New Zealand just because, she says, “I wanted to come to New Zealand. I’ve been there 10 years ago to promote an album for a day and now my children are both at university, I can travel more, and we have Skype.”

So she’ll put on the habit and do it all again, remembering that her first time in the role “was possibly the highlight of my life”, not just, she says, because the show was so successful.

“I loved the role and the production. I just feel better when I play this character. I feel like I’m a better human being. I put this wonderful habit on and it makes me feel good about the world.”

Climb Ev’ry Mountain seems as much an analogy of her life as a song title. Her story seems to be one of rags to riches but, she says, it’s not at all.

“My childhood was rich in family and music.”

She was born in Yorkshire “and the whole area was industrial with pits and factories but they all had bands and choirs . . . That’s all we had. There was no telly.”

Her father was a railway signalman and her mother a seamstress: both were musically adept.

“When I was 7 or 8 they went into education. My father went to night school and to training college and ended up headmaster of a Sheffield school.”

Ad Feedback

Her mother became a teacher and a school head of music.

“I saw my parents climb that mountain and that was truly inspiring.”

She grew up with an eclectic mix of music and knew, at 15, that, if her parents could do what they did, she could be an opera singer. The epiphany came when an aunt took her to see her first opera. Dressed in their best, they watched the English National Opera – where she would later become lead soprano – perform Madame Butterfly.

“When I got home I went to the headmistress and said I wanted to be a singer.”

She had been studying science but the headmistress was not surprised. “She juggled timetables so I could do an A-level in music and I got into the royal academy and the rest is history. The ball kept rolling.”

She became a star in the opera and television world. She was lead soprano at the English National Opera for a decade from 1984, has recorded 14 solo CDs, had many television appearances and several shows, and was an early participant in Strictly Come Dancing.

Everything, she says, eventually had to fit in with her family life. She was well into her 30s when she met and married her doctor husband, Peter, in 1990.

Friends brought him to see her sing at a time when she had given up on the idea of finding a life partner and having a family – “I’d auditioned the world and he just wasn’t out there”. They went out to dinner, and that was another “the rest is history”.

It was, she says, quite genuinely, love at first sight. “We have two gorgeous children, a precious thing I never thought would happen.

“I gave up on international work once the children were born but I had some residual contracts.”

One took her to St Louis on an American tour on her daughter’s first birthday. She was singing Tchaikovsky’s None but the Lonely Heart when she burst into tears. “I told them I was very sorry, they were lovely, but it was my little girl’s birthday and I should be there. Those lovely American people gave me a standing ovation.”

When she was committed to overseas performances, she tried to take the children.

“I took them to Australia and we made it a family holiday. I couldn’t bear to be away from them. Family is more important than career. All the decisions I’ve made, I’ve made around family, to care for them. Singing is a priority too, but I can sing anywhere.

“You can only be as happy as your most unhappy child and that goes for the rest of your life. For me it was a no-brainer. If I’d been away, they would have been unhappy.”

She says her career has been “a fantastic journey” and at nearly 60, she is still travelling it. “I think it’s a case of ‘if you don’t use it, you lose it’.”

Not losing it takes discipline.

“I have singing lessons every week which keeps me vocally fit. Vocal hygiene is a whole area on its own.”

She needs to drink plenty of water, keep out of dusty or otherwise dubious atmospheres, and be careful with what she eats – “not too much coffee or spicy foods which might give reflux during the night”.

“And not too much talking.” She needs to keep generally fit.

“It’s all part of my routine. If I go on holiday for two weeks my voice feels affected. I can have a week but any longer and I’m in trouble. I haven’t noticed it get harder as I get older. If anything it’s a bit easier, my voice knows how to behave. It took me a long time to get my routine together.”

Music, she says, is like “eating and breathing, a powerful natural urge” and brings her fulfilment and a sense of power.

“Singing gives me the spiritual connection to the very heart of myself. It’s so holistic, when you sing.

“It’s an intensely physical activity but it connects my heart, my brain and my spirit, all the elements of what I am, never more so than when I’m playing Mother Abbess. I bless the day I was asked to play that role.”

Share

Kate Ritchie gives birth to baby girl


She is renowned as one of Australia’s best known child stars, but now Kate Ritchie has become a mother herself after giving birth to a baby girl.

Share

Top 10 Shortland Street deaths


The untimely death of Sarah Potts is causing outpourings of grief from her most ardent fans.

It came out of the blue and was shocking for many people.

A tribute page

Share

Good golly, Miss Molly


Molly Quinn leans in conspiratorially. The vivacious flame-haired actress checks again to make sure no-one else is listening and then admits that when she was younger she vowed never to do anything TV-related.

‘‘I was strictly going for film. I was really gung ho about it,’’ the now 20-year-old Quinn says.

Share

Medical misadventures and miracles


This is no genteel Downton Abbey with stethoscopes.

Share

Why 2014 is Ethan Hawke’s year


Ethan Hawke has too many other interests, whether it’s working on the New York stage or helping raise his four children, to overly worry about the details of a successful movie career now three decades old, but recently he had an epiphany about his standing. More than ever, people were recognising him on the street.

“I’ve been thinking about it and it’s because when I was younger and Reality Bites came out, only young people recognised me. Now I’ve made so many different movies that older people have seen some,” Hawke says. “Now there’s a certain crowd that loves Before Midnight, a certain crowd that loves The Purge, a certain crowd that love Gattaca.”

The 43-year-old actor, with the familiar facial hair and wry, contemplative air, may have chosen the Boerum Hill neighbourhood in Brooklyn over life in Los Angeles, but he has become one of Hollywood’s most dependable stars, making movies that are sometimes memorable and sometimes successful (and occasionally both) for each of those distinct crowds.

He’s as likely to be in an art-house drama like last year’s acclaimed Before Midnight, for which he earnt his third Academy Award nomination as one of the co-writers, as a low-budget pulp thriller or horror film, such as 2012’s Sinister. The reason, as Hawke modestly sees it, is that he doesn’t disappear into his roles like the true greats do.

“There are certain types of actors that can shape change themselves, people like Philip Seymour Hoffman and Daniel Day-Lewis,” he says. “I’ve never really been the kind of performer who can do that, so one of the ways I challenge myself to be better is to be in different kinds of movies.”

That approach has never been in sharper focus than in the coming weeks, when Hawke memorably stars in two distinct yet impressive movies that release on successive Thursdays. The knotty science-fiction storytelling of Predestination, written and directed by Australian filmmakers the Spierig Brothers and shot in Melbourne, will be followed by the coming-of-age saga Boyhood, a study of time’s passage and life’s changes from Hawke’s good friend and Before Midnight director, Richard Linklater.

“He’s a great guy,” says Michael Spierig, who on stage read out a gracious email from Hawke apologising for his absence when Predestination opened the Melbourne International Film Festival on July 31. Michael and his sibling Peter got to know Hawke when he came to Queensland to shoot their second feature, the 2009 vampire-tale twist Daybreakers, and when they sent him Predestination, their adaptation of a 1959 Robert A. Heinlein short story where Hawke plays a time-travelling policeman, he replied within 24 hours, telling them he was in.

Hawke’s commitment matters, especially on independent film projects. With his name attached, Predestination was announced several years ago at the Cannes Film Festival, where it was sold to various international distributors with the proceeds funding production.

Ad Feedback

“Some actors just come on set, read the lines, and off they go. Ethan gets involved,”

Share