Pamela Anderson files for divorce


Pamela Anderson has filed for divorce according to reports.

The former Baywatch star first married Rick Salomon in 2007, and the couple remained together for less than ten weeks before she filed for an annulment, citing fraud. But in January this year the 47-year-old revealed that they had remarried on an unspecified date.

Now Anderson is calling time the relationship once again, TMZ reported.

Relations have obviously deteriorated between the two since the blonde actress irst confirmed their reunion.

“Yes. We’re very happy,” she told E! News at the start of the year. “Our families are very happy and that’s all that matters.”

The couple were spotted getting cosy on holiday in France last October.

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Red-carpet glamour at the opera


When people have a night at the opera, their attention falls on the singers and accompanying orchestra.

While most will be aware of the director and conductor, who they often won’t see until the curtain falls, few would think of the rest of the team behind the production.

One of those invisible roles is that of assistant director. New Zealand Opera’s production of La Traviata, opening in Wellington on Friday, has Jacqueline Coats.

Coats says she often has to explain her job to people outside opera.

“It’s quite a specific opera role. You don’t really get it much in theatre, but in opera we definitely work in a hierarchy. You have got the director and the assistant under that and working down from there.”

Most, but not all, opera directors have some musical knowledge. La Traviata director Kate Cherry does work off the score rather relying on others.

But while there may be some leeway for the director, Coats says musical knowledge is essential for her role.

“As an assistant you do really need to read music because you do so much interaction with stage management and opera singers.

“You do have choreographers – and I’m not one of those people – who work as assistant directors as well. You [also] get assistants who have also been stage managers, who swap between the two because there is a very close bond between assistant directors and stage managers.”

Coats has been an assistant director for several NZ Opera productions, as well as directing operas and other productions for other companies, and spearheading her own shows for more than a decade.

She was one of the first graduates of a masters degree in theatre arts in directing run by Victoria University and Toi Whakaari New Zealand Drama School in Wellington in 2002.

But Coats was already drawn to opera due to a love of singing. She comes from a family that embraced theatre and singing including her father Ray and brother Stuart Coats – and it’s her brother, who continues to sing and perform, who she credits with getting her hooked on opera.

“He was doing a singing degree at Victoria and got into the chorus of Wellington City Opera at the time. He used to get me tickets so I came along to the opera and started watching and getting really excited at the scale of it,” she says.

Coats also sings. She’s a member of Wellington choir Nota Bene, which marks its 10th anniversary this year. “That’s what I do for my relaxation,” she says. “I’m an alto and I’m in no way an opera singer.”

For La Traviata – Coats’ first production of the Verdi classic – her depth of musical knowledge and experience has been essential.

It has included working with a 44-strong choir. While the core cast and some crew are the same as for La Traviata’s Auckland season last month, the choir is specifically sourced from Wellington. New Zealand Opera is one of the few opera companies in the world which maintains choirs in different cities – it also has a choir in Christchurch – to use in touring shows.

Coats says having a new choir for the Wellington season, as well as a new orchestra with Orchestra Wellington, re-energises the production. “It’s got that feeling of difference and freshness to it.”

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La Traviata’s assistant director has also come to further appreciate Verdi’s three-act opera, first staged in 1853.

“[It] comes down to the quality of the music as well. With a fantastic composer like Verdi there is so much in that music. He is a very psychological writer. There’s a lot of depth of character that comes out of the music. I get something new out of it all the time.”

THE opera is a co-production with the State Opera of South Australia and Opera Queensland.

Australian Lorina Gore plays Violetta Valery, the “fallen woman” – or “la traviata” – of the title, and fellow Australian, tenor Samuel Sakker, plays nobleman Alfredo Germont.

“It’s the first time they’ve played these roles and it’s wonderful to have the exploration of the parts. It’s very exciting in the room . . . developing that.

“The characters in La Traviata are real people. That’s what I always come back to. They are not all kings and queens. They are people we can identify with and I think that is why people love the opera so much. They can look at these people and understand why they are doing things.”

An added bonus is the design, sets and costumes. It’s not set in a specific time period, but is still easy for audiences to connect with.

“It needs to be placed where you write a letter to break up with your lover rather than emailing them. It’s got that kind of timelessness to it.

“But it also has that elegance [of] Hollywood, that red carpet glamour.”

– La Traviata, St James Theatre, Wellington, Friday, 7.30pm; Sunday, 2.30pm, July 15, 6pm, July 17 and 19, 7.30pm.

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Watch: Estere performs in her PJs


Wellington singer Estere produces most of her music in her bedroom with a musical co-hort she calls Lola.

So it’s only apt that she showed up at her Aston Rd Sessions clad in her PJs.

Performing Patchwork Soldier, the third track off her self-released debut album. “Our life experiences are like different pieces of a patchwork quilt sewn together. Sometimes we need to give and receive help when trying to stitch up our ripped seams,” she explained the subject of the song

Since obtaining Lola in March 2012, Estere has played festivals and shows in New Zealand, Australia, South Korea and Europe, and was picked to open for the Queen of Soul, Erukah Badu earlier this year in Auckland.

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Kanye ‘needs a white dressing room’


Kanye West reportedly refuses to step foot in any dressing rooms that aren’t white.

The 37-year-old rapper performed at London’s Wireless Festival over the weekend. He replaced Drake, who pulled out of the festival at the last minute due to illness.

Apparently event organisers were dismayed when they learned the Flashing Lights hitmaker’s decoration expectations weren’t met.

“Kanye will only ever have a white dressing room, and this is usually included in his rider,” an insider told the British newspaper The Daily Mirror. “But for some reason, there was black linen in his dressing room on the Finsbury Park site.

“This could not be allowed to happen.”

The white ambiance is purportedly a standard part of the star’s rider.

Organisers of the Wireless Festival were instructed to remove the black d

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Michelle Rodriguez moves on with Disney star


Michelle Rodriguez and Zac Efron are reportedly “genuinely fond of each other”.

The actors were spotted kissing in Sardinia on Sunday, just weeks after

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Solange opens up about That Elevator Incident


Solange Knowles has covered

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Five Doctor Who scripts leaked online


Five scripts from the upcoming season of the iconic British science fiction series

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How to move like an ape


Terry Notary is Hollywood’s human shape-shifter. In a blink, he can become an elf, an ape or almost any other moving creature.

An expert in motion-capture performance, he specializes in bringing non-human characters to life on screen. He’s played goblins in The Hobbit, a Who in How the Grinch Stole Christmas and a winged, dragon-like banshee in Avatar.

In “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes,” opening Thursday, Notary plays more than 100 primates. He also taught the film’s stars and stuntmen how to find their simian side.

“He’s like an ape Zen master,” said director Matt Reeves. “He lives in every frame that has an ape in it.”

Notary demonstrated his technique during a recent visit to the Hollywood dance studio he uses to prepare for films. The compact, muscular father of four visibly transforms as he describes how apes are gut-driven and grounded. His stomach softens, his neck and shoulders slouch, his lower jaw protrudes. His eyelids drop slightly as his eyes take on a present yet faraway quality.

He grunts and howls before springing from his chair and breaking into a quadruped run. He bounces around the empty studio on all fours, with “arm extensions” he developed allowing him to mimic ape-like movements. He stops suddenly, as though he’s spotted a threat, and becomes even more animated, emitting loud wails of distress.

Then he’s back being human again to talk about the process.

Notary aspired to compete in the Olympics while training as a gymnast at UCLA but then found work with Cirque du Soleil after graduating with a theater degree. He came to Hollywood as a stuntman and from there, developed into a sought-after movement coach for motion-capture shots, where actors are wired and their movements captured electronically for the building of computer-generated imagery.

He created the lithe, long-limbed motions of the Na’vi in “Avatar,” taught the Silver Surfer how to ride in “Fantastic 4: Rise of the Silver Surfer” and went ape in three films, starting with Tim Burton’s “Planet of the Apes” in 2001. (He performed stunts in all as well.)

“I’m a good observer of movement and behaviour,” the 45-year-old said. “That’s what my talent is, I think.”

He begins with an image of the character. For imaginary creatures, he might picture objects from nature. When conceptualizing the Na’vi, for example, he thought of reeds swaying underwater, gracefully at ease with the energy around them. For a goblin, he thought of a piece of crumpled tin foil.

“If you throw it, it has hard edges,” he said. “It’s not going to be predictable. It’s going to be edgy and sharp and not have any root.”

To develop ape expertise, Notary hung out with a couple of chimps and spent a lot of time watching primates at the zoo, videotaping and studying their behaviour.

“I just took every little video I could and dissected it into moments,” he said. “And I just always watched the videos as though I was watching a person in an ape suit, playing an ape. It made me realize … it’s all in the subtleties.”

Notary had six weeks to put the actors and stuntmen starring in “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” through his ape training. The first step Shed preconceptions and human conditioning and just “be.”

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“It’s not about doing anything, it’s about undoing,” he said. “If you can start to get back to the base, neutral animal that we are, you’re an ape.”

Letting go of human tendencies can take weeks, but once the actors get it, “it’s magic.”

“You’re tapping into your instinct,” he said.

With a relaxed mindset and intention rooted in the gut, this would also include bounding about on all fours – with a little help from Notary’s foot-long “arm extensions.”

For the latest “Planet of the Apes” film, Notary even trained his two daughters, ages 9 and 11, in simian technique. “They’re playing little kid apes,” said Notary, who was on a media tour to promote the film.

Nearly every ape in the film, except the tiniest baby, was played by a human actor in a motion-capture suit. Tiny lights recorded their every movement, including a helmet with a face camera that tracked emotional expression. Animators at Weta Digital then transferred the data onto each of the computer-rendered apes in the film.

Now, Notary is off to New Zealand to work on the next “Hobbit” film, but it took a while for him to let go of his inner primate.

“It takes me about four months to get out of it,” he said. “My wife’s like, ‘Can you sit up please You’re slouching.'”

Notary says he can teach almost anyone how to be an ape. Just follow these simple steps to discover your simian side:

1. Undo human social conditioning by being still and doing nothing. Let your brain soften so natural instinct can take over. “Ape school first day is a little bit about the philosophy,” Notary says. “Actors come in and they want to know how to be an ape. And the first thing is you don’t do it – you allow the ape to come out of you. You find it. You don’t do anything. You don’t put anything on. You’re not putting a costume on. You’re just getting back to being a child … that natural human animal that we are.”

2. Drop your intention into your gut. Apes have a “grounded, economic, circular gut-driven drive,” he says, with a centre of gravity lower than a human being’s. Think of the gut as the engine and inspiration of movement, and lock it into your hips and legs.

3. To walk on all fours like an ape, Notary uses short, crutch-like tools he calls “arm extensions” in each hand. He begins in a position not unlike a yoga downward dog, but with his shoulders raised higher by the foot-long extenders. The quadruped walk involves alternating and angling arms and feet with each step, a process that becomes more natural with practice.

4. Howl, swing and play.

– AP

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‘Modfather’ Ray Columbus receives UK nod


New Zealand “Modfather” Ray Columbus has been included on a new British 3-CD box set of 1960s Mod music.

The 80-song collection Keep Lookin’ features Yo Yo, We Want A Beat, and I’m Good For You as well as a 48-page booklet.

Columbus, best known for the 60s hit, She’s a Mod, is suffering from an immune-deficiency disorder thought to have been brought on by the heavy medication he has been on for a raft of health issues.

He had a heart attack in 2004 while standing as a candidate in Auckland local body elections and had to withdraw. A stroke seven years ago left him paralysed on much of his right side.

His 54-year music career produced 14 hits and he toured with stars including The Rolling Stones and Roy Orbison.
Columbus became the first pop star to be awarded an Order of the British Empire for services to New Zealand in 1974.

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– Stuff

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You’re on The Voice – try and understand that!

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