Posts Tagged ‘news’



Opera Notes

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

The Royal Opera House’s forthcoming production based on the life of Anna Nicole Smith might offend the cognoscenti, but what a story line…..

At eighteen she married a kitchen hand while working at Jim’s Crispy Fried Chicken Restaurant near Waco,Texas; when the marriage failed she moved to Houston but her lack of talent as a topless dancer had her switched to the lunchtime shift where as luck would have it lonely octogenarian oil billionaire J. Howard Marshall II would pass an hour. When she was asked if it was love at sight, (shades of Mrs. Merton asking Debbie McGee what first attracted her to the millionaire Paul Daniels), Anna Nicole revealed it was his liver spots that turned her on.

He married her, ignoring the sixty three-year age gap and paying for the 44DD breast implants which brought her Playboy shoots and her own TV show, but within a year he’d died, leaving her half his fortune.

Happy endings are bad news in operas and sure enough Anna Nicole spent the next five years in failed bids to get her hands on the cash, ballooning to fifteen stone by her bankruptcy hearing and finally dying of a drug overdose in a Florida hotel. Such was her fame that when a judge burst into tears when awarding custody of the body, he was promptly offered his own TV show.

But hold that curtain! Act Three centres on her funeral, (for which she wore a designer ball gown with matching tiara and a light dusting of her 44 DDs with J. Howard’s ashes), where her two ex’s stared each other down across the nave and her mother arrived to a chorus of booing. She was thirty nine.

Casting’s a cinch – Covent Garden have fat ladies coming out their arias – but the uninspired title of ‘Anna Nicole’ will have to go – for the life story of a thwarted topless dancer, it has to be, ‘If She Wants to Rigoletto.’

Hit and Miss

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

By going freebie,the London Evening Standard’s reader demographics might no longer stack up for advertisers.Promised newspaper readership is also under attack by the measurable hits of online editions, not helped when the papers unwisely list their most viewed stories.
The Telegraph Online’s top three favourites today are not MP’s expenses, the Middle East or the BNP saga, but….

1. Man proves he has world’s strongest fingers.
2. Video of Russian nearly killed by a runaway bus.
3. ‘Jesus’s face’ spotted on the toilet door in Ikea, Glasgow.

Unfortunately, the newspaper’s Business section carries a whole-page ad from the Newspaper Marketing Agency with the tag line, ‘Nothing targets customers quite like a newspaper.’


News you may have missed

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

Returning to Heathrow from the madhouse tour of the States promoting ‘India Exposed’ provided catch-up time on news that may have slipped through the global net…

Italian tax authorities, pursuing Maradona’s unpaid tax bill when playing for Napoli FC, raided his Alpine chalet and confiscated his earrings. It’s a start, but he still owes $54 million.

When stumped for ideas writing the sequel to ‘The Da Vinci Code, author Dan Brown says he dons gravity boots “because you think differently upside down,” which might well explain his prose.

With patriotic pride, Texan Tom Nall has launched organic tequila in a bottle shaped like Texas. Trouble is, the tequila’s made in Mexico, and the bottle in China.

Her Majesty Queen Rania Al Abdullah has pronounced on her husband, His Majesty King Abdullah II Ibn Al Hussein, King of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.
“OK, I am biased,” she tweets, “but u gotta admit my King is kinda cool, no?”

Winners of the literature category in the latest Ig Nobel Awards are the Irish police who have issued 50 traffic tickets to visitor Prawo Jazdy which is Polish for ‘Driver’s License.’


News photography is dead

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

That’s it, then. News photography is dead. So says a spokesman for the owners of the Gamma Agency of Paris, who have just filed for bankruptcy – and they didn’t come much better than Gamma. Maybe I’ll end up demonstrating the old skills to school parties at some provincial craft museum as they superglue me to my milking stool. More from Gamma’s eulogy here

Talking of death, the Italian journalist Roberto Saviano, has written of life in protective custody since threats from the Camorra in 2006 when his mafia exposé ‘Gomorrah’ was published. Moving writing in beautiful English from a man who, despite a team of armed guards and forever on the move, can die at any moment.

While soldiers face the same, they have occasional lulls in battle or R&R behind the lines; not for Saviano who, at twenty nine, faces an open-ended 24/7 threat of execution for writing the truth in a First World democracy. Read the full article here.