Tag: AFP

  • Palestinian activist wins prize for peaceful resistance

    Palestinian activist wins prize for peaceful resistance

    Palestinian activist Issa Amro on Thursday accepted the Right Livelihood prize — considered by some an alternative Nobel — for his “nonviolent resistance to Israel’s illegal occupation” in the West Bank, the jury said.

    Amro was born in the city of Hebron, a flashpoint West Bank city where roughly 1,000 Jewish settlers live under heavy Israeli military protection amid some 200,000 Palestinians.

    He has dedicated his life to fighting against Israel’s occupation of the West Bank.

    The 44-year-old founded the Youth Against Settlements group, which campaigns against the proliferation of Jewish settlements in the territory — communities widely regarded as illegal under international law.

    The rights campaigner has been repeatedly detained and tortured by both the Palestinian Authority and by Israel, the foundation said.

    “It’s a miracle that I still exist,” said Amro.

    When Palestine Polytechnic University, where he was studying, closed in 2003 during the Second Intifada, Amro successfully led a six-month civil disobedience campaign.

    “I managed to reopen the university with other students,” Amro said in a statement.

    “I graduated as an engineer and as an activist — it became part of my character,” he added.

    – ‘Non-violent methods’ –

    The Sweden-based Right Livelihood Foundation also honoured Joan Carling, a Filipina champion of indigenous rights and Anabela Lemos, a climate activist from Mozambique.

    It also gave the nod to research agency Forensic Architecture for its work in uncovering human rights violations around the world.

    The foundation said the four prize winners had “each made a profound impact on their communities and the global stage”.

    “Their unwavering commitment to speaking out against forces of oppression and exploitation, while strictly adhering to non-violent methods, resonates far beyond their communities,” Right Livelihood said in a statement.

    Carling from the Philippines was recognised for having defended the rights of indigenous communities for three decades, particularly in their fight against mining projects.

    The foundation celebrated Lemos, who heads the NGO Justica Ambiental (JA!), for her role in opposing liquefied natural gas extraction projects in northern Mozambique.

    Forensic Architecture, a London-based research laboratory known for 3D modelling conflict zones, won the distinction for “pioneering digital forensic methods” to ensure accountability of human rights violations around the world.

    By teaming up with Ukraine’s Center for Spatial Technologies to reconstruct Mariupol’s Drama Theatre before it was destroyed in 2022, the firm highlighted Russia’s “strategies of terror” and “attempts to obscure evidence of their own crimes”, the foundation said.

    Swedish-German philatelist Jakob von Uexkull sold part of his stamp collection to found the Right Livelihood award in 1980, after the foundation behind the Nobel Prizes refused to create new distinctions honouring efforts in the fields of environment and international development.

  • Coldplay ticket scalping fiasco sparks backlash in India

    Coldplay ticket scalping fiasco sparks backlash in India

    British rock band Coldplay’s upcoming tour of India has triggered a police investigation and dismayed fans after scalpers bought up cheap tickets to resell online for more than $1,000 apiece.

    Thousands of music fans tried and failed to buy tickets for three concerts scheduled in financial hub Mumbai next January, sold by popular Indian online ticket portal BookMyShow.

    All three shows sold out in minutes, and those who missed out were infuriated when they saw $70 (6,000-rupee) tickets appear on resale websites at vastly inflated prices.

    “The tickets are being sold at 10 times, 20 times, 30 times the price that is being sold on the website itself,” student Anna Abraham, 19, told AFP.

    “I wouldn’t feel good about it myself if I knew that I paid for something 30 times more than what I could have paid for.”

    Local media reports said BookMyShow’s chief operating officer was questioned by police Monday after a complaint brought by Mumbai lawyer Amit Vyas, who claimed the vendor was working with “black marketeers” to make an extra windfall on ticket sales.

    “I checked with nearly 100 people who I know are regulars at concerts, none of them had gotten a ticket,” Vyas said, according to the Indian Express newspaper.

    “This made me suspicious. I then decided to approach the police as I knew that something was amiss.”

    BookMyShow issued a statement after the public backlash began last week, saying it had “no association” with unauthorised ticket selling.

    “Scalping and black marketing of tickets is strictly condemned and punishable by law in India and BookMyShow vehemently opposes this practice,” the company said.

    Controversies surrounding tickets for major international musical or sporting events are not new.

    US megastar Taylor Swift lashed out at Ticketmaster in 2022 following fan anger over sales to concerts staged for her globe-spanning ‘The Eras Tour’.

    The debacle sparked debate over the Ticketmaster’s privileged position in the industry amid fan complaints of hidden fees, rampant ticket scalping and limited tickets due to presales.

  • Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs sued for alleged 2001 rape

    Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs sued for alleged 2001 rape

    A woman who alleges Sean “Diddy” Combs drugged and violently raped her, filming the assault so he could sell it for the titillation of others, said Tuesday she was suing the rapper.

    Thalia Graves held a tearful press conference in Los Angeles, in which she said the emotional and mental pain from the 2001 attack remains with her.

    The 54-year-old Combs was indicted last week on three criminal counts that allege he sexually abused women and coerced them into drug-fueled sex parties using threats and violence.

    A spate of separate lawsuits, now including Graves’s, in the last year have painted the picture of a serial predator, sparking a massive fall from grace for the hip hop star.

    “It goes beyond just physical harm caused by and during the assault. It’s a pain that reaches into your very core of who you are, and leaves emotional scars that will never be fully healed,” she told reporters.

    “I’ve had PTSD, depression and anxiety. I’m emotionally scarred. It has been hard for me to trust others, to form healthy relationships, or even feel safe in my own skin.

    “Flashbacks, nightmares and intrusive thoughts make me feel like it’s a constant struggle.”

    In the criminal case, Combs is charged with racketeering conspiracy, sex trafficking and transporting victims across state lines to engage in prostitution.

    Prosecutors say Combs was the don of a criminal enterprise that ensnared women and forced them to commit sex acts under the threat of violence, financial insecurity and reputational ruin.

    – Mounting lawsuits –

    Allegations have been building against Combs since last year, when singer Cassie, whose real name is Casandra Ventura, alleged Combs subjected her to more than a decade of coercion by physical force and drugs as well as a 2018 rape.

    A spate of similarly lurid lawsuits since describe Combs as a violent man who used his celebrity to prey on women.

    Combs has pleaded not guilty to the criminal charges. He has been jailed awaiting trial.

    Graves’ lawyer, Gloria Allred, said her client’s claims were not part of the criminal indictment.

    Graves’ suit, filed in the Southern District of New York, says she met the rapper through her then-boyfriend, who worked at Combs’s Bad Boy Records.

    It details how Combs took her to his studio, giving her a glass of wine along the way that she believes was spiked. She says she lost consciousness shortly after arriving.

    When she woke up, she was naked and bound. But when she called for help, Combs’ associate Joseph Sherman smashed her head into a pool table.

    Combs and Sherman then raped her and she passed out again.

    The suit says the two men repeatedly warned her over the following years not to talk about the alleged assault.

    After Combs’s ex-girlfriend Cassie Venture went public with allegations about his criminal behavior last year, Graves discovered her assault had been taped and sold as pornography.

    The legal action demands compensatory and punitive damages, as well as other costs and fees.

  • Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs charged with racketeering, sex trafficking

    Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs charged with racketeering, sex trafficking

    Superstar rap mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs pleaded not guilty Tuesday to racketeering and sex trafficking charges, and was ordered to remain in custody pending a trial.

    Combs, 54, was arrested by federal agents in New York on Monday evening and accused in a just-unsealed three-count criminal indictment alleging he sexually abused women and coerced them into drug-fueled sex parties using threats and violence.

    Appearing in a Manhattan courtroom where many family members came to support him, the one-time music dignitary pleaded not guilty. His lawyer asked Magistrate Judge Robyn Tarnofsky to allow his release on bail.

    After a lengthy bail hearing in which the prosecution voiced concerns including the potential for witness tampering and flight risk, Judge Tarnofsky denied bail, saying she was concerned about a “power imbalance” in the case that includes people she said are “subject to coercion.”

    She also cited concerns over his alleged propensity for anger, violence and substance abuse.

    Combs, who was wearing black t-shirt, grey sweatpants and sneakers, did not noticeably react to the pre-trial detention ruling, which his attorney, Marc Agnifilo, said would be appealed.

    Along with racketeering conspiracy and sex trafficking, Combs is charged with one count of transporting victims across state lines to engage in prostitution.

    Damian Williams, the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said that although Combs is the only person indicted for now the investigation is ongoing.

    The indictment alleges that for decades Combs “abused, threatened, and coerced women and others around him to fulfill his sexual desires, protect his reputation, and conceal his conduct.”

    It accused him of running a criminal enterprise that carried out “sex trafficking, forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery, and obstruction of justice.”

    Combs allegedly engaged in a “persistent and pervasive pattern” of verbal, emotional, physical, and sexual abuse of women, the indictment said.

    “On numerous occasions from at least in or about 2009 and continuing for years, Combs assaulted women by, among other things, striking, punching, dragging, throwing objects at, and kicking them,” it said.

    Williams said female victims were forced to engage in extended sexual performances with male commercial sex workers in sessions called “Freak Offs,” which were planned and controlled by Combs and often videotaped.

    “The Freak Offs sometimes lasted days at a time… and often involved a variety of narcotics such as ketamine, ecstasy and GHB,” he said. “The indictment alleges that Combs threatened and coerced victims to get them to participate in the Freak Offs.”

    – Bombshell suit –

    The powerful music industry figure, who has gone by various monikers including Puff Daddy and P Diddy, was credited as key to hip hop’s journey from the streets to luxury clubs.

    Despite his efforts to cultivate the image of a smooth party kingpin and business magnate, a spate of lawsuits describe Combs as a violent man who used his celebrity to prey on women.

    The floodgates opened last year after singer Cassie, whose real name is Casandra Ventura, alleged Combs subjected her to more than a decade of coercion by physical force and drugs as well as a 2018 rape.

    The pair met when Ventura was 19 and Combs was 37, after which he signed her to his label and they began a relationship.

    The bombshell suit was settled out of court, but a string of similarly lurid sexual assault claims followed — including one in December by a woman who alleged Combs and others gang-raped her when she was 17.

    The rapper’s luxury homes in Miami and Los Angeles were raided by agents in March.

    Disturbing surveillance video emerged in May showing Combs physically assaulting his then-girlfriend Ventura, corroborating allegations she made in the now-settled case.

    The prosecution referenced the footage’s content during the bail hearing, suggesting it is a key element of their case.

    – Global fame with dark shadow –

    Born Sean John Combs on November 4, 1969, in Harlem, the artist entered the industry as an intern in 1990 at Uptown Records, where he eventually became a talent director.

    In 1991, he promoted a celebrity basketball game and concert at the City College of New York that left nine people dead after a stampede and resulted in a string of lawsuits.

    He was fired from Uptown and founded his own label, Bad Boy Records.

    That began a quick ascent to the top of East Coast hip hop, along with his late disciple, The Notorious B.I.G.

    Combs boasted a number of major signed acts and production collaborations with the likes of Mary J Blige, Usher, Lil’ Kim, TLC, Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men.

    He was also a Grammy-winning rapper in his own right, debuting with the chart-topping single “Can’t Nobody Hold Me Down” and his album “No Way Out.”

  • Justin Timberlake given community service in drunk driving case

    Justin Timberlake given community service in drunk driving case

    Pop star Justin Timberlake was handed a sentence of community service on Friday after he changed his plea to guilty following his arrest for drunk driving, US media reported.

    On June 18, the 43-year-old entertainer was pulled over in the town of Sag Harbor, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) east of New York City, after police observed his BMW go through a stop sign and struggle to stay within road lanes.

    Sag Harbor Village Justice Court justice Carl Irace handed Timberlake a community service sentence and ordered the star to make a public statement after the singer pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of driving while alcohol impaired, broadcaster NBC reported.

    The charge is a traffic violation that carries a fine between $300 to $500 and a 90-day license suspension.

    Timberlake told Irace that he would be willing to perform between 25 and 40 hours of community service to settle the case, NBC reported.

    – ‘Selfish’ star –

    “I try to hold myself to a very high standard for myself. This was not that. I found myself in a position where I could have made a different decision,” Timberlake said outside the court.

    “Even if you’ve had one drink, don’t get behind the wheel of a car, there’s so many alternatives,” added Timberlake, who wore a dark cardigan and a pearl necklace.

    “I grew up in a small town so I can appreciate and understand the strain, or unique nature, of what this must have been for the people of Sag Harbor… I’m very grateful and I thank them.”

    Sag Harbor is an upmarket community in the exclusive Hamptons, notorious for its decadent parties and a favorite destination for the rich and famous, many of whom have summer houses on Long Island.

    The officer who pulled over the “Selfish” singer said he was in no fit state to drive, although Timberlake has always insisted he had only one martini at the American Hotel during an evening with friends.

    “His eyes were bloodshot and glassy, a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage was emanating from his breath, he was unable to divide attention, he had slowed speech, he was unsteady afoot, and he performed poorly on all standardized field sobriety tests,” the police report said.

    Timberlake’s lawyer, Edward Burke Jr, said that the star was respectful during his encounter with police.

    “Contrary to what was reported, (Timberlake) wasn’t drinking other people’s drinks, or warned in advance not to drive, he wasn’t rude, he wasn’t obnoxious, he wasn’t belligerent. In fact he was polite and he was cooperative,” he said outside court.

    “His plea today to a reduced and amended non-criminal charge, which is a traffic violation, is consistent with these facts.”

  • James Earl Jones: stage legend, voice of Darth Vader

    James Earl Jones: stage legend, voice of Darth Vader

    James Earl Jones, a versatile and award-winning American stage and screen actor who used his booming deep voice to bring the iconic “Star Wars” villain Darth Vader to life, has died, his representatives said Monday. He was 93 years old.

    From the works of Shakespeare and August Wilson, to his indelible voiceovers in the blockbuster space saga and as Mufasa in the Disney classic “The Lion King,” Jones earned fans with his ability to play both the everyman and the otherworldly.

    He won three Tony awards including a lifetime award, two Emmys and a Grammy, as well as an honorary Oscar, also for lifetime achievement.

    In 1971, he became only the second Black man nominated for an Academy Award for best actor, after Sidney Poitier.

    All of these accolades were hard-won, as Jones, who was born in segregated Mississippi on January 17, 1931, had to overcome a childhood stutter that often led him to barely speak at all.

    “Stuttering is painful. In Sunday school, I’d try to read my lessons and the children behind me were falling on the floor with laughter,” Jones told the Daily Mail in 2010.

    Reciting his own poetry, at the prodding of an English teacher, helped him to gain control of his voice, which would later be used to strike fear among millions in “Star Wars” as Darth Vader.

    Jones did not physically portray the character — David Prowse wore Vader’s black cape and imposing face mask, while Jones offered the voice, oozing the evil power of the Dark Side.

    “I am your father,” Vader tells Luke Skywalker, portrayed by Mark Hamill, in a pivotal fight scene in “The Empire Strikes Back” — a twist etched in cinema history.

    “He created, with very little dialogue, one of the greatest villains that ever lived,” “Star Wars” creator George Lucas said in 2015 at a ceremony honoring Jones in New York.

    – Broadway –

    From Mississippi, Jones moved to Michigan at age five, where he was raised by his maternal grandparents.

    Initially, he studied to become a doctor, and though he shifted his major to drama, and graduated from the University of Michigan, he didn’t initially think about an acting career.

    “Even when I began acting studies, I thought about being a soldier,” Jones told PBS public television in 1998.

    “And the idea of being an actor didn’t occur to me until after my service was almost finished.”

    After university, Jones served in the US Army and then moved to New York to try his luck in acting, working as a janitor at night to make ends meet.

    He made his Broadway debut in 1958 in “Sunrise at Campobello” at the Cort Theatre — which in 2022 was renamed the James Earl Jones Theatre.

    He tackled many iconic Shakespeare characters on the stage, including Othello and King Lear, but also performed in several Wilson plays, chronicling the Black experience in America.

    “On stage, Jones was commanding, powerful. He embodied the elegance and dignity of African American men,” said director Kenny Leon.

    But the silver screen eventually came calling.

    – Admirals and kings –

    Jones’ film debut came in 1964 as Lieutenant Zogg in Stanley Kubrick’s Cold War satire “Dr Strangelove.”

    Military roles would crop up throughout his career, notably Admiral Greer in three films about Tom Clancy’s beloved character Jack Ryan (“The Hunt for Red October,” “Patriot Games,” “Clear and Present Danger”).

    As for kings, he has played a few — King Jaffe Joffer in the Eddie Murphy comedy “Coming to America” (1988) and Mufasa, Simba’s father, in “The Lion King” (1994).

    His first major award came in 1969, a Tony for best actor in a play for “The Great White Hope”, in which he portrayed troubled but gifted boxer Jack Jefferson — based on the real-life Jack Johnson, the first Black world heavyweight champion.

    Jones revived the role in a film adaptation of the play — earning his sole Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe award for the performance. In 2011, he won an honorary Academy Award.

    Even into his 80s, Jones was a force on Broadway, starring opposite Angela Lansbury in “The Best Man” in a 2012 revival — earning another Tony nomination in the process — and with Cicely Tyson in “The Gin Game” in 2015.

    And for years, he greeted viewers of the cable news network CNN with the simple phrase: “This is CNN.”

    – ‘Darker voice’ –

    But his most famous role was ultimately the one for which he never appeared on screen.

    Lucas eventually chose between Jones and film legend Orson Welles for the role.

    “George thought he wanted a — pardon the expression — darker voice. So he hires a guy born in Mississippi, raised in Michigan, who stutters and that’s the voice and that’s me,” Jones told the American Film Institute in 2009.

    Jones initially did not want to be credited for the film, as he felt his voiceovers were simply part of the movie’s special effects, but eventually conceded, and went on to voice the character in multiple films, television series and video games.

    In his 90s, he stepped back from the role. But he signed over the rights to his voice recordings to a start-up that is working with Lucasfilm to preserve and recreate it for future projects using artificial intelligence.

    The technology was used in the Disney+ mini-series “Obi-Wan Kenobi” in 2022, according to Vanity Fair.

    Jones’ second wife Cecilia died in 2016. They had one son.

  • Jennifer Lopez slays TIFF red carpet as she unveils ‘Unstoppable’ 

    Jennifer Lopez slays TIFF red carpet as she unveils ‘Unstoppable’ 

    Jennifer Lopez infused the Toronto film festival with a dose of A-list glamour Friday at the world premiere of her new movie, true-story sports drama “Unstoppable,” which earned a rousing ovation.

    The 55-year-old actress, singer and dancer was making her first red carpet appearance since the announcement of her divorce from Ben Affleck, who co-produced the film with best friend Matt Damon but was not in attendance.

    And she did not disappoint, wearing a skin-baring metallic silver gown with seemingly nothing but giant black velvet bows holding it together, her hair long and loose. Sky-high silver platform heels finished the look.

    In “Unstoppable,” Lopez plays Judy, the mother of high school wrestler Anthony Robles (Jharrel Jerome) who, though born with only one leg, doggedly pursued — and achieved — his dream of becoming a US university champion.

    Oscar nominee Don Cheadle and Michael Pena play his demanding coaches, and Bobby Cannavale plays his abusive stepfather, who repeatedly puts the family in jeopardy.

    “Unstoppable” tells Robles’s inspiring story while also delving into the difficulties of his family life, and showcasing his close relationship with his mother.

    The film had several applause moments in the buildup to Robles’s winning run to a college championship for Arizona State University. Then, as the credits rolled, Robles himself, in the theater, earned a standing ovation from the crowd at Roy Thomson Hall.

    “When I read the script, I felt like so many women, including myself, could relate to the struggles that she had gone through in her life,” Lopez said in a question-and-answer session after the screening.

    “This story being a Latino story, being so inspiring — it was just something that kind of grabbed me.”

    Jerome said he trained for five months, including with Robles on the wrestling mat.

    “As an actor, it is one of the most daunting tasks to portray somebody that is real,” he said.

    “Unstoppable” was one of the marquee events of day two at the Toronto International Film Festival, the largest in North America, which offers a mix of Oscar-bait movies, feel-good family fare and searing documentaries.

    This year marks a return to normal for the event, after twin strikes by actors and writers kept top talent from promoting their work here last year.

    Lopez is just one of the major stars visiting Canada’s biggest city for the festival.

    Ben Stiller, Orlando Bloom and Katy Perry hit the red carpet on Thursday night. Also expected are Angelina Jolie, Elton John, Bruce Springsteen, Salma Hayek, Cate Blanchett and Nicole Kidman.

    – ‘The Last Showgirl’ –

    Earlier, Gia Coppola debuted her latest effort behind the camera, “The Last Showgirl,” starring Pamela Anderson as veteran Vegas performer Shelley, who is left in despair when her show is abruptly canceled.

    After a 30-year run dancing half-naked in sequins and high heels in a traditional Sin City show, Shelley must figure out what the future holds.

    Coppola — the granddaughter of legendary director Francis Ford Coppola — goes beyond the bright lights of America’s favorite gambling playground to show the harsh realities of the entertainment industry and what happens to those it discards, especially women.

    “I think I’ve been getting ready my whole life for this role,” Anderson told the audience after the screening.

    The “Baywatch” actress quipped that it was the first time she’d been offered a script that was “coherent.”

    Jamie Lee Curtis teared up as she spoke about the film. She plays Annette, a onetime dancer and Shelley’s best friend who ends up waitressing to make ends meet — and frittering away her hard-won earnings on bets.

    “It’s a movie about dreams and going after your dreams,” only to discover they may never be realized, said the Oscar winner.

  • Explosive Trump biopic to hit US theaters before election: reports

    Explosive Trump biopic to hit US theaters before election: reports

    A controversial biopic of Donald Trump that depicts the former president raping his wife and which has drawn legal threats from his attorneys will hit US theaters this October, it was reported Friday.

    Tiny indie studio Briarcliff Entertainment plans to release “The Apprentice” for US audiences less than a month before Trump takes on Kamala Harris in the country’s razor-tight presidential election, the Hollywood Reporter said.

    Representatives for Briarcliff did not immediately respond to AFP queries.

    The explosive film about Trump’s younger years caused shockwaves at the Cannes Film Festival in May.

    Its most talked about scene shows Trump raping his first wife, Ivana, after she belittles him for growing fat and bald.

    In real life, Ivana accused Trump of raping her during divorce proceedings but later rescinded the allegation. She died in 2022.

    The movie also shows Trump suffering erectile dysfunction, and undergoing liposuction and surgery for hair loss.

    Just hours after “The Apprentice” premiered in May, Trump’s lawyers vowed to sue the producers, calling the film “garbage” and “pure malicious defamation.”

    Further complicating the film’s prospects for US release is that one of its early financial backers was pro-Trump billionaire Dan Snyder, who was reportedly displeased with its depiction of Trump and sought to block the movie.

    He has now been bought out of his financial stake in the movie, according to the Hollywood Reporter. The film is set to be released in US theaters October 11, the Los Angeles Times said.

    Sebastian Stan’s lead performance as young New York property tycoon Trump received largely positive reviews at Cannes.

    The film’s screenplay was written by Gabriel Sherman, a journalist who covered real estate for the New York Observer and regularly spoke to Trump.

    Far from a simple hatchet job, the film depicts Trump as an ambitious but naive social climber desperately trying to navigate the cutthroat world of Manhattan property deals and politics.

    The Times of London argued it would “make you feel sympathy for Trump.”

    But Trump’s decency is gradually eroded as he learns the dark arts of dealmaking and power from his mentor Roy Cohn, played by “Succession” star Jeremy Strong.

    Film director Ali Abbasi told AFP he included the rape scene to show how Trump distanced himself from “human relationships that define him and that hold him in check as a human being.”

    Stan, best known from the Marvel superhero movies, added that Trump’s early behavior “is much more relatable than we want to admit.”

    Briarcliff Entertainment launched in the late 2010s. Its founder Tom Ortenberg previously helped steer Oscar campaigns for best picture winners “Spotlight” and “Crash.”

    He is expected to promote “The Apprentice” in Hollywood’s upcoming award season.

    The news comes on the same day “Reagan,” another biopic of a former Republican president, Ronald Reagan, hits US theaters

  • Angelina Jolie as the tormented ‘Divina’ Callas at Venice

    Angelina Jolie as the tormented ‘Divina’ Callas at Venice

    Angelina Jolie returns to the limelight at the Venice Film Festival on Thursday as Maria Callas, “La Divina”, whose rich voice, glamourous persona, and tragic love affair mesmerised audiences around the world.

    In “Maria”, the modern-day movie star will strive to capture the transcendent dramatic presence and tormented life of one of opera’s most resplendent divas in a biopic from Chilean director Pablo Larrain.

    The film that premieres on the Lido Thursday evening, on the festival’s second day, is the last in Larrain’s trilogy of movies about iconic real-life women — after 2021’s “Spencer” about Lady Di and 2016’s “Jackie” about Jacqueline Kennedy.

    The director has said only a larger-than-life star in her own right could play the role of the American-born Greek singer.

    Enter Jolie.

    “This is the greatest diva of the 20th century, and who could play that?” Larrain told Vanity Fair last week.

    “I didn’t want to work with someone that didn’t have that already. I needed an actress who would naturally and organically be that diva, carry that weight, be that presence. Angelina was there.”

    Absent from the screen since 2021, the 49-year-old American actress and director has kept a relatively low profile even as her lengthy, acrimonious divorce from Brad Pitt continues to make headlines.

    The public’s fascination with Jolie’s private life has parallels with Callas’s, whose stormy life and loves — including her relationship with the Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis, who left her for Jacqueline Kennedy — were similarly fodder for the tabloids.

    But while the paparazzi will be out in full force Thursday, Jolie — who was spotted in the Venice heat Tuesday cloaked in a Christian Dior trench coat — will not cross paths with Pitt during her visit.

    Pitt’s action comedy “Wolfs”, in which he and George Clooney play rival professional fixers, is playing out of competition on the Lido on Sunday, as purposely planned by festival organisers to avoid awkward encounters.

    – ‘Very scary’ –

    One of 21 films in competition for Venice’s prestigious Golden Lion prize, “Maria” centres on Callas’s final, isolated years in Paris in the 1970s, as she looks back at her life and career before her death at age 53 from a heart attack.

    Jolie reportedly studied six months for the role, training herself to mimic the singer’s cadences and tones as the film mixes in her own voice with that of the celebrated soprano.

    “You can’t make a movie like this with an actress that is not actually singing it,” Larrain told Vanity Fair.

    “This is the real thing — it was very scary for her, but she did it.”

    While some critics found flaws with Callas’s voice, it was nevertheless deeply expressive, able to impart dramatic intensity to any role, which combined with her beauty and majestic stage presence prompting frenzied standing ovations.

    A towering talent with a tireless work ethic, Callas was often portrayed as a “temperamental” star, a label she rejected, defending herself as a disciplined perfectionist with high standards.

    She single-handedly revived the 19th-century bel canto operas of Donizetti, Rossini and Bellini — whose “Norma” was one of Callas’s signature roles.

    Callas died in 1977.

  • Oasis announce 2025 worldwide reunion tour kicking off in UK

    Oasis announce 2025 worldwide reunion tour kicking off in UK

    British rock legends Oasis announced Tuesday they will reunite for a worldwide tour, as brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher ended an infamous 15-year feud.

    The band behind hit songs including “Wonderwall”, “Don’t Look Back In Anger” and “Champagne Supernova”, will play an initial 14 gigs next year in Cardiff, Manchester, London, Edinburgh and the Irish capital, Dublin, starting in July.

    Oasis also plan to play in “continents outside of Europe later next year,” according to a statement posted on their website.

    Formed in Manchester, northwest England, in 1991 and credited with helping create the Britpop era of that decade, Oasis’ reunion tour will be the Gallagher brothers’ first performances since 2009 after they fell out.

    “The guns have fallen silent. The stars have aligned. The great wait is over. Come see. It will not be televised,” Oasis said, as it announced the reunion alongside the first details of the tour.

    The announcement capped days of hints and heightened speculation the band was set to play again.

    However, there was no announcement regarding the release of any new music, while Oasis will reportedly not play next year’s Glastonbury festival despite widespread speculation.

    “Oasis today end years of feverish speculation with the confirmation of a long-awaited run of UK and Ireland shows forming the domestic leg of their Oasis Live ’25 world tour,” the online statement added.

    – ‘Hottest tickets’ –

    The tour will begin over two nights at the Principality Stadium in the Welsh capital Cardiff from July 4, 2025, followed a week later by four gigs at Heaton Park in their hometown, Manchester.

    Oasis will then play London’s Wembley Stadium — on July 25 and 26 as well as August 2 and 3 — before taking to the stage over two nights at Murrayfield Stadium in the Scottish capital Edinburgh.

    The UK and Ireland gigs will conclude with two performances at Dublin’s Croke Park in mid-August.

    “Their only shows in Europe next year, this will be one of the biggest live moments and hottest tickets of the decade,” the statement said.

    A press release said there had been “no great revelatory moment that has ignited the reunion — just the gradual realisation that the time is right”.

    It promised “a set full of wall-to-wall classics,” hailing the “charisma, spark and intensity that only comes when Liam and Noel Gallagher are on-stage together”.

    Tickets for the UK dates will go on sale from 9:00 am (0800 GMT) on Saturday, with Dublin tickets available from 8am (0700 GMT) the same day.

    Social media was abuzz with the news, with the band’s post racking up hundreds of thousands of likes and fans sharing their excitement.

    Manchester teaching assistant Michelle Locke, 45, told AFP she was “well excited” after hearing the “great news”.

    “We’ll be up early… trying to get tickets,” she said, posing in front of a mural to the Gallaghers in south Manchester.

    – ‘Best news’ –

    In Camden, the north London neighbourhood famous for live music and where Oasis were fixtures in the mid-’90s, others were equally enthused.

    “It’s the best news in the world… it’s what we need!” said Pauline Weir, 50, manager of the Modfather clothing store.

    Oasis has long been synonymous with Britpop music, when it enjoyed a fierce rivalry with London band Blur, co-founded by Damon Albarn.

    The Manchester outfit was also notorious for public fights between Liam and Noel.

    The sibling tensions came to a head during a spat at a 2009 Paris festival, when Liam broke one of Noel’s guitars.

    The brothers have not played together since — but both have still regularly played the band’s hits to sold-out crowds.

    Until now, they had largely communicated in public through taking swipes at each other on social media.

    The brothers have teased at a reconciliation before, with Noel last year saying “never say never”.

    The hints became firmer more recently, with social media accounts for the brothers and Oasis all trailing Tuesday’s much-anticipated announcement.

    The now-confirmed reunion will take place 30 years after Oasis’s 1995 album “(What’s the Story) Morning Glory?”, which received international critical and commercial acclaim.

    Meanwhile, tracks from the first recording session for its debut album “Definitely Maybe”, released a year earlier, will be put out Friday — a day after its 30th birthday — Britain’s Press Association (PA) news agency said.