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::OTHER NEWS::
LE Newsletter -
July 3, 2008
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Stars Gather To Celebrate Mandela's 90th
Birthday
Source:
www.globeandmail.com
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Jill Lawless, The Associated Press
(June 27, 2008)
LONDON — Will Smith charmed the crowd, Amy
Winehouse wowed them just by showing up – but
Nelson Mandela
proved the biggest star of all at a concert Friday in honour of
the South African statesman's 90th birthday.
Acts including Queen, Razorlight, Leona Lewis and a host of
African stars joined more than 40,000 music fans for the outdoor
show in London's Hyde Park, hosted by Hollywood star Smith and
held to mark Mandela's birthday on July 18.
American singer Josh Groban and the Soweto Gospel Choir also
performed at the event, which comes 20 years after a 70th
birthday concert at London's Wembley Stadium that helped press
South Africa's apartheid authorities for Mandela's freedom.
The biggest cheers of the night were reserved for Mandela, who
told the crowd that the 1988 concert had made a difference.
“Your voices carried
across the water to inspire us in our prison cells far away,”
said Mandela who spent 27 years in South African prisons. “We
are honoured to be back in London for this wonderful
celebration.
“But even as we celebrate, let us remind ourselves that our work
is far from complete.”
Proceeds from the show – for which there were 46,664 tickets –
are going to 46664, the AIDS charity named for the number
Mandela wore in prison.
Mandela looked frail and leaned on a cane as he was helped onto
the stage by his wife, Graca Machel. But his brief speech
brought thunderous applause.
“Where there is poverty and sickness including AIDS, where human
beings are being oppressed, there is more work to be done,”
Mandela said. “Our work is for freedom for all.
“We say tonight after nearly 90 years of life, it is time for
new hands to lift the burdens. It is in your hands now.”
Also on the lineup were Annie Lennox, reggae star Eddy Grant,
girl group Sugababes and African artists including Emmanuel Jal,
Johnny Clegg and Papa Wemba.
One of the biggest stars was Winehouse, whose participation
looked doubtful after she collapsed at home last week and was
hospitalized. But she made it. Looking composed if slightly
unsteady – and buoyed by the crowd and her excellent band – she
performed two of her best-known songs, “Rehab” and “Valerie.”
She returned at the end of the show to lead the artists in a
rendition of The Specials' 1984 hit “Free Nelson Mandela.”
Winehouse spent several days in a London hospital undergoing
tests. Her father said she had developed the lung disease
emphysema from smoking cigarettes and crack cocaine, although
her spokeswoman later said Winehouse only had pre-emphysema
symptoms.
One of the past century's most admired political figures,
Mandela attracted a sense of respect approaching reverence from
concertgoers and performers alike.
Singer Leona Lewis dedicated her global chart-topper “Bleeding
Love” to him, saying that when she was a child her aunt and
grandmother told her stories “about this incredible, wonderful
and great man, Nelson Mandela.”
“Happy birthday. Thank you so much for everything,” she said.
Many who turned out on a cool, blustery London evening said they
had come to see the Nobel Peace Prize-winning Mandela rather
than any particular act.
“Ever since I was at university, 35 years ago and I learned
about the injustices in South Africa I have wanted to meet
Nelson Mandela,” said London primary-school tutor Sheelagh
Leith, 51. “I have always wanted to be in his presence.”
Singer Jim Kerr of Scottish band Simple Minds, which played the
1988 show and performed again Friday, said the mood was very
different 20 years on.
“I was angry the last time,” Kerr said. “It was very much a
protest concert. This is a joyful occasion.”
Mandela, a frequent visitor to London, has been in the city
since Monday for a week of birthday events. At a star-studded
dinner on Wednesday, he criticized Zimbabwean President Robert
Mugabe, saying there had been a “tragic failure of leadership”
in the southern African country. Zimbabwe's opposition pulled
out of Friday's presidential election runoff, citing
state-sponsored violence, leaving Mugabe the only candidate.
Mandela was released from prison in 1990 and was elected South
Africa's first black president in 1994. He retired from politics
in 1999 and has since campaigned to prevent the spread of AIDS.
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