Rod Stewart, Susan Boyle to open Glasgow Games


Aging rocker Rod Stewart and late blooming singer Susan Boyle will headline the Commonwealth Games opening ceremony in Glasgow.

Stewart, 69, whose father was Scottish, and Britain’s Got Talent 2009 finalist Boyle, 53, originally from West Lothian, will sing for an expected crowd of 40,000 at Celtic Park on July 23.

The massive TV audience will also see Scottish talents including the singer-songwriter Amy Macdonald, violinist Nicola Benedetti and Gaelic-language singer Julie Fowlis perform.

But organisers have abandoned plans to demolish five high-rise buildings that are part of Glasgow’s infamous Red Road housing estate. They stated safety concerns as the main reason, though their plans drew a massive public outcry when they were revealed earlier this year.

Meanwhile, Australian singer Kylie Minogue would perform a five-song set at the closing ceremony on August 3.

Her appearance would link Glasgow with the host of the 2018 Games, Australia’s Gold Coast.

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– Stuff

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Rachel Hunter – NZ will always be home


She’s come a long way since she was first “discovered” by a photographer at Milford Beach on Auckland’s North Shore.

But Rachel Hunter –

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Verdi’s La Traviata fine theatre


REVIEW:

With New Zealand Opera now without a prime sponsor, life is financially perilous, so it is no surprise that the operas for this year are box office gold. But it is also a reminder that both were the operas of 2007, so memories are still vivid. And that year’s La Traviata – from Moscow via Canada – was a scintillating production with an unforgettable Violetta, the Russian soprano Elvira Fatykova.

But this year’s co-production with South Australia and Queensland is, on its own terms, a brilliant success. The sets, built around a cross section box, with a range of chandeliers setting the dramatic mood for each act and some wonderfully moody lighting, allow the drama to flow. And although the first act party is a little stilted, with the guests milling around somewhat, the second act masked ball is superbly done, with the choreography of the palm readers and the matadors completely successful.

Act 3 racks up the tension on a set where the chandeliers have collapsed to the floor, reflecting Violetta’s straitened circumstances. The costumes are unobtrusively modernish; they do not in any way intrude on the production.

The cast, led by Australian Lorina Gore, are a well balanced lot. Although Gore is a hint harsh in the coloratura of the first act, she sings and acts brilliantly thereafter, and her relationship with Alfredo, improbable as it might be, develops superbly to a riveting death scene. As Alfredo, Samuel Sacker reveals a lovely free tenor, and as his father Giorgio Germont, David Stephenson is very convincing. So are all the minor roles, allowing the famous story, taken from Dumas’ The Lady of the Camellias, to proceed without unnecessary directorial intrusion.

The large chorus is, as we have come to expect, a marvel of precision and involvement, and the orchestra, under Joel-Hornak does well. But not quite as well as I have heard in the pit for earlier productions – being a hint too loud for the singers on occasions and with slightly wayward woodwind at times – but the brass are superbly coherent.

This is, on balance, fine theatre, and if the fevered audience reaction is any indicator, it will enjoy a successful season.

AT A GLANCE

New Zealand Opera – Verdi: La Traviata.

Soloists, Orchestra Wellington conducted by Emmanuel Joel-Hornak, Chapman Tripp Chorus. Director: Kate Cherry. Sets and Costumes: Christina Smith. Lighting: Matt Scott.

St. James Theatre, Wellington, July 11-19

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– The Dominion Post

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Crews flaunts sensitive side


He might have been a straight shooter on the sports field, but when it comes to his acting career choices Terry Crews has torn up the rule book.

As a former NFL defensive end turned actor, the 1.83m, powerfully built Terry Crews might ooze machismo but that doesn’t mean he isn’t in touch with his feminine side.

The star of comedy cop show Brooklyn Nine-Nine and recent Adam Sandler rom-com Blended admits he really has no choice – after all he has four daughters and only one son.

“The daddy-daughter relationship makes you more sensitive as a man – you have to be,” the 45-year-old says down the phone line from Los Angeles.

“All that gruffness, bigness and strength is no good around these ladies. You have to be empathetic and have regular tea parties with your little baby girl.”

Much to his family’s amusement, art seems to have finally imitated life with Crews’ role on Brooklyn Nine-Nine. He plays Detective Sergeant Terence Jeffords, a highly-strung father of twin daughters – Cagney and Lacey. Crews says the character is no accident. Brooklyn Nine-Nine creators Dan Goor and Mike Shure wrote the role especially for him and have clearly been keeping watch.

“They’ve nailed all those little idiosyncrasies. They saw that I arrive in workout gear and put it on when I’m leaving so they’ve added tonnes of gym jokes. Likewise, they see me drive away in my mini-van – the most feminine vehicle imaginable – so that went in the script. To me that’s what smart writing is all about.”

Crews says he was attracted to the show, not only because of Goor and Shure’s work on Parks and Recreation, but also the chance to work with Andy Samberg.

“I was always a big fan of Andy and I knew he was going to break huge. Andy is the future of comedy – young, talented, smart – I thought ‘this is a guy I want to be in business with’.”

Standing on the podium at the Golden Globes just months later to help collect the award for Best TV comedy, Crews knew it was the best business decision he had ever made.

“We won after just 10 episodes had aired; it just doesn’t happen that way. We have lightning in a bottle right now and everyone wants to make it work here. I’ve done some projects in the past where some people have only been into it at 50 per cent – that’s a horrible place to be. I promise I’m never going to mail it in – I’m at 150 per cent all the time.”

He describes the show as a workplace or family comedy rather than a cop show. “Holt (Andre Braugher) is the dad, I’m the mom and all the other detectives are the kids, with Samberg as the petulant child. It’s my job to make sure the family runs smoothly.”

It’s a role that Crews has extended to around the set as well. “I act as advisor to the younger cast members, warning them about what’s going to happen with social media and trolls. We also talk relationship stuff. I give all the secrets – everything I know, I tell.

“When Andy was about to get married [to musician Joanna Newsom] I told him it was going to take his career to a whole new level. Often guys hide their wedding rings, but I say ‘tell everyone you’re married and run with it and you’ll see that it’s your greatest glory’.”

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He knows what he’s talking about. Crews has been happily married for almost 25 years to Rebecca, a former beauty queen and gospel recording artist. She is the one who has encouraged him in his varied career choices.

“To me there are no rules when it comes to acting – you do movies, TV, commercials (Crews has been the face of Old Spice) and animation. Really the only obstacle is what’s in my head. Many people do their career for other people – old teachers, professors, even their parents. Me, I had no such baggage. I came from the NFL, so I’m just happy to be here. Most athletes want to be actors and all the actors want to be athletes. I’ve been living two dreams.”

He believes that also gives him a unique perspective on both worlds. “I have too many friends that play football to get involved in a fantasy football league – I find it very objectifying. Likewise, I don’t like it when they talk about my Hollywood friends either. People tend to be very heartless when it comes to someone who is famous. ‘I’ve spent time with their families – they are no different to you’, I always say.

For his own part, Crews says he is more than happy to continue mixing things up (as well as filming the second season of Brooklyn, he will also appear in next month’s The Expendables 3), although he is not keen to do anything that will take him away from his family for any great length of time.

“I spent two-and-a-half months in South Africa on Blended so we flew my family out there and we had a wonderful time. Man, I need to be around my kids all the time otherwise I start to lose influence. They start to forget your name after a while.”

Brooklyn Nine-Nine, 9.55pm, Wednesday, TV2.

– Wellington

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Kylie Minogue recalls great love and heartbreak


To some it would be a pick up line with enough arrogance to warrant a drink in the face.

But for Australia’s musical golden girl Kylie Minogue, the very forward statement from Michael Hutchence left her equally taken aback and intrigued.

In an interview aired on Sunday night that was more joyous than emotional, Minogue relived the “great love” she shared with the late INXS frontman.

“I never met anyone like that, I really hadn’t,” she told the Nine Network’s 60 Minutes program.

“I was probably not very cool then and he was uber cool and somehow we met in the middle.”

Asked about the rumoured pick up line Hutchence used on her – “Kylie I don’t know whether to take you to lunch or have sex with you” – the former Neighbours star was overwhelmed by giggles.

“I’m not going to say exactly what the line was because I like that it was just between him and I but it was something like that,” she told interviewer Karl Stefanovic.

Hutchence and Minogue’s romance in the late 80’s was short-lived.

“It was great love and it was true heartbreak,” she said.

Hutchence took his own life in a Sydney hotel room in 1997.

Minogue said she missed him just as much as anyone who was fortunate enough to share time with him.

Years later Minogue overcame another hurdle when she was diagnosed with breast cancer.

The coach on television show The Voice became emotional as she recalled having to rely on others to take care of her through the illness.

“Oh boy how did I do that” she said.

“Someone had said to me at the time ‘be a little bit selfish’.

“It’s not in my nature to be selfish but now was the time to do that, let people take care of you.

“And um…that’s what I did.”

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– AAP

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Katherine Heigl: ‘I don’t see myself as difficult’


In the PR-driven, image-controlled world of Hollywood it is a rare sight to see an actress being publicly called to account for her “difficult” reputation.

But former Grey’s Anatomy star Katherine Heigl found herself under fire this week, fielding at-times hostile questions about whether she and her mother Nancy, who is also her manager, were difficult to work with.

Heigl was appearing on a panel at a television press event in Los Angeles to promote her new series, a political drama titled State of Affairs.

Things came unstuck when a journalist asked her whether stories in the media, about how difficult she was to work with, were true.

Heigl, momentarily flustered by the directness of the question, responded with: “I certainly don’t see myself as being difficult. I would never intend to be difficult. I don’t think my mother sees herself as being difficult.

“I think it’s important to everybody to conduct themselves professionally and respectfully and kindly. If I’ve ever disappointed somebody, it was never intentional,” Heigl continued.

The 35-year-old actress courted controversy in 2008 when, as one of the stars of Grey’s Anatomy, she withdrew herself from Emmy contention.

At the time, she said not been “given the material … to warrant an Emmy nomination”; her remarks were interpreted as an ungracious swipe at the show’s writers and producer Shonda Rhimes.

Heigl ultimately quit Grey’s Anatomy for a film career, but her films have either struggled at the box office, or received poor notices from film critics.

In a recent interview with Marie Claire magazine, she said the harsh criticism of her work in film felt like “my best friend for a long time suddenly turned on me. And I didn’t expect it. I was taken by surprise and angry at it for betraying me.”

Television producer Ed Bernero, who was on the panel alongside Heigl, and produces State of Affairs, tried to answer on her behalf but only got out a few words before he was cut off by the journalist.

“Seriously, I want to hear it from Katherine,” the journalist said.

As the tension grew, Heigl responded, but didn’t directly address the point any further, ambiguously talking about the Marie Claire interview.

“I don’t know that I said my career was not under my control. Are you referring to the Marie Claire article” she said. “I think I said I had stopped challenging myself … I felt that I was sort of letting down my audience and wasn’t challenging them either.”

Attention then shifted to Heigl’s mother Nancy, who, in addition to being her manager, is also credited as one of several executive producers on State of Affairs.

And with came an even more awkward question: what, exactly, does “mom” do on the show

“We work as a partnership,” Nancy Heigl responded. “I am her mother for sure, so of course I have her best interests, but I’m really learning. But it’s been fun and it’s been interesting. I’m really new to it.”

The issue of Mrs Heigl’s qualification for her role as an executive producer on a network television series was raised earlier in the day, when NBC’s executives fronted the media for an “executive session”.

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Asked why Nancy Heigl was working as a producer on State of Affairs, NBC’s entertainment president Jennifer Salke said the project was developed with the two women – mother and daughter – as a package deal.

“It’s not surprising when the mother walks in the door with her, because we knew that they’re a set,” Salke said. “She’s not been disruptive in any way that I can think of.”

– Sydney Morning Herald

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Resurrection designed to make you wonder


An eight-year old American boy is found in China and repatriated by an immigration agent. Defying orders, the agent returns him to his parents in the small town of Arcadia, Missouri, only to discover that he had apparently drowned in 1982.

That’s the premise of the new eight-part US series Resurrection which has already been a smashing success in both America and Australia.

But despite its seemingly spooky, supernatural conceit, executive producer and writer Aaron Zelman insists it is essentially a show about a town and deliberately designed to make you wonder. “You may think it’s one thing, but by the end of an episode, it’s a little bit different.”

Former House star Omar Epps (who plays Agent J Martin Bellamy) agrees, saying that he was attracted to the project by the possibilities of where the story might go. “Then as each episode arrived, for me, it was ‘ooh, I didn’t see this coming’.”

Co-star Frances Fisher (Touch) has also embraced the story’s uncertainties. “I read the pilot and was so moved by it that I felt I could be part of this without knowing what’s going to happen in the future, because who really does in life”

Based on the 2013 novel The Returned (and contrary to popular belief not the similarly-themed French television series of that name) by Jason Mott, the show represents the first foray into television by Brad Pitt’s production company Plan B (World War Z, 12 Years A Slave). And yes, Zelman won’t rule out a cameo by their boss, “perhaps as a love interest” or “long-lost brother”.

Zelman’s fellow executive producer Michele Fazekas says the great thing about having a short season of just eight episodes was that they were able to plot everything out. “We knew where we were going in every

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Kristin Hersh has no memory of writing her songs


In the early 1980s – dark times for quality rock –

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Angelina Jolie will not be visiting Nauru


Hollywood film star Angelina Jolie will not be visiting the small island of Nauru, which also holds one of Australia’s offshore processing centres.

Nauru President

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Gossip: A son’s feelings and a cricketer’s love


Actress Teuila Blakely’s son Jared has spoken of how hurt he felt at seeing his mum upset by the reaction to the sex video of her and Warriors player Konrad Hurrell.

Teuila, 39, shares a west Auckland home with 22-year-old Jared, whom she raised as a solo parent after being ostracised by her mother for becoming pregnant at 16, New Idea reported.

After the footage of the Shortland Street star and league player Hurrell, 17 years her junior, emerged on social media in early May, Teuila had gone to her son’s room to tell him about it.

“When it happened, mum came into my room and said, ‘Son, there’s something on the internet and people are going crazy’. And I just went ‘okay’,” Jared told New Idea.

“I was never angry with her or Konrad, because of course he did something stupid … sending the video to his mates clearly wasn’t the smartest move … but it was a mistake. Every one of us makes mistakes. His intent wasn’t to hurt mum. If anything, I’m angry with his friends. If I sent something private to my friends, I’d expect them to have the decency to keep it to themselves.”

After the initial shock, he couldn’t care less about the incident, he said.

“What mum did, didn’t hurt me. What hurt me was seeing my mum so upset and listening to her apologise repeatedly to everyone like she’d offended them… Watching mum saying sorry like she was in court for killing someone was the hard part.”

Teuila said she had “cried for about three days” because of the reaction to the video but had no regrets, including the act itself.

Jared advised people to not get “so uptight” about it.

“Of course it’s been hard, but I can’t take on everyone who says something, no matter how much I was to protect mum, so moving on is the only option.”

Over at Woman’s Day, the big New Zealand story is about the relationship between disgraced cricketer Lou Vincent and his fiancee, former magazine boss Susie Markham.

He’s 35 and she’s 50 – with children aged 32 and 25 – and has stood by him as he confessed to match-fixing.

The couple met at a charity dinner on the British Channel Island of Guernsey in July 2012, although at the time her marriage was ending and she was in no mood to entertain his advances, Woman’s Day reported.

“But it did my confidence a great deal of good, because he really, really chased,” Markham said.

Vincent persisted and it was not long before the couple were shuttling back and forth between Guernsey and England, where he was playing cricket.

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While both insisted the age gap was not an issue, it had been a surprise when they shared their first kiss.

Markham recalled how she told Vincent her daughter was 30 and he “kind of jumped”. “You said 13 not 30, right” he asked.

“He told me his age and I nearly ran out the door. I was so shocked because I thought he was older,” Markham said.

Vincent said it had taken him a couple of months to tell Markham about his role in match-fixing.

“I was really scared she would reject me. I was in love and I wanted to be honest,” Vincent said.

Markham, who had five siblings but lost two sisters, as well as her father, in difficult circumstances by the time she was 19, said she was big on forgiveness and did not believe in bitterness.

“I was appalled by Lou’s crime – it’s huge. Cricket’s patriotic – it’s a gentleman’s game. He’s shamed his country, but to me, he is the ultimate gentleman – he just made a big mistake. I don’t condone it in any way but there are worse crimes.”

As for the rest of the world, Woman’s Day reported that True Blood actor Joe Manganiello, 37, had “all but” moved into Sofia Vergara’s seven-bedroom Beverly Hills mansion.

Modern Family star Vergara, who had a 21-year-old son, was already talking babies.

A source said both wanted to sell up their Los Angeles homes and buy somewhere together for a fresh start.

“It’s still relatively early days but they aren’t going to wait around, and if they continue like this, Sofia will have another ring on her finger by the time the year is out.

“She is desperate for more children and Joe would love to become a father. With Sofia just having turned 42, they want to get on with it and start trying.”

New Idea is confident Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, is expecting her second baby because the news came from Kate’s oldest friend Jessica Hay.

Hay was reputable because she had famously confirmed the duchess was pregnant with first child George in a world exclusive, the magazine said.

“Kate’s inner circle is buzzing with the news that she is pregnant. I’ve heard it from several different friends of theirs now and they’re saying that they think there’s going to be an official announcement in weeks,” Hay said.

“I think she could be pregnant again too, and I’m sure we’ll hear something from the couple themselves in the coming weeks if she is expecting, as everyone’s saying she is.”

A telltale sign was that Kate’s face had become fuller, which happened when she was expecting George.

At the New Zealand Woman’s Weekly, Prince George’s upcoming first birthday is previewed in a special souvenir issue.

Born on July 22 last year, George had “proved to be an unstoppable bundle of energy”, the magazine said. A recent sighting at a polo match confirmed he was walking with a little support from his mother, and was growing at a healthy rate.

Sources suggested Kate and William thought a quiet rural upbringing would be better for George than the hurly-burly of city life in London.

Details of George’s birthday celebrations were being kept secret, while a new set of family photographs was expected.

In Woman’s Day, singer Lorde puts the record straight about teenagers.

“A lot of people seem to think that all teenagers are, like, super-misguided, not at all ambitious and just kind of, like, dropkicks,” the 17-year-old said.

“Such a high proportion of the people my age I know are super-driven, super-focused and super-creative in a way I haven’t seen a lot of adults in this business being. Teenagers are a lot wiser than you think.”

With her album Pure Heroine a smash hit, her record company had decided to just let her get on with it.

“I feel like they’ve seen early on that I can see what’s cool and what teenagers think is cool much better than they do,” Lorde said.

And she did not think scantily-clad female stars were a bad influence.

“People should stop worrying about their daughters,” Lorde said. “I don’t see a female without clothing as a terrible influence. There are worse things. Shooting people. Glorifying violence…”

– Stuff

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