Tag Archives: Glee

Glee does Fashion’s Night Out

Some inspired promotion from FOX in the US emerged this week. Our favourite Gleeksters are getting their fashion on for a promotional video ahead of the 8th September – the official date for the global Fashion’s Night Out extravaganza. And just 12 days later, the new season of Glee happens to air on the American network.

The skit (above) is too short for my liking (please let there be a full-length music video aired at some point, or at least additional break bumpers with out-takes), but some of the production stills give you an idea of the fun had on set.

Lea Michele looks a-mazing (in Balmain, natch), Heather Morris rocks the currently ubiquitous star print trend and David Bowie‘s Fashion is obviously right on the money.

Glee meets Vogue. Awesome. Inspired.

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Glee Live – the set list

Glee Live

(L-R) Chris Colfer, Heather Morris, Cory Monteith, Lea Michele and Mark Sellig, Glee Live 2010, California. (c) Kevin Winter/Getty Images North America)

Less than a month to go now until Glee Live lands on our shores, taking over the O2 for a week in June. Naturally, I’m going.

For those attending who wish the set list to remain a surprise until the day, look away now.

For the rest of you Gleeks, let the excitement commence:

Main set with featured performers and original artists

  • Don’t Stop Believin’ (Journey)
  • The Dog Days Are Over featuring Amber Riley and Jenna Ushkowitz (Florence + the Machine)
  • Sing (My Chemical Romance)
  • I’m a Slave 4 U featuring Heather Morris (Britney Spears)
  • Fat Bottomed Girls featuring Mark Salling and Ashley Fink (Queen)
  • I Want to Hold Your Hand featuring Chris Colfer (The Beatles)
  • Ain’t No Way featuring Amber Riley (Aretha Franklin)
  • PYT featuring Kevin McHale (Michael Jackson)
  • Born This Way (Lady Gaga)
  • Fireworks featuring Lea Michele (Katy Perry)
  • Teenage Dream featuring the Warblers, a rival glee club including Darren Criss (Katy Perry)
  • Silly Love Songs featuring the Warblers and Criss (Wings)
  • Raise Your Glass featuring the Warblers and Criss (Pink)
  • Happy Days Are Here Again/Get Happy featuring Michel and Colfer (Barbra Streisand & Judy Garland)
  • Lucky featuring Chord Overstreet and Dianna Agron (Jason Mraz & Colbie Caillat)
  • River Deep — Mountain High featuring Riley and Naya Rivera (Ike & Tina Turner)
  • Don’t Rain on My Parade featuring Michele (Barbra Streisand)
  • Jessie’s Girl featuring Cory Monteith (Rick Springfield)
  • Valerie featuring Rivera (The Zutons/Amy Winehouse)
  • Loser Like Me

Encore

  • Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It) featuring Colfer (Beyoncé)
  • Friday featuring the guys (Rebecca Black)
  • Safety Dance featuring McHale (Men Without Hats)
  • Empire State of Mind (Jay-Z & Alicia Keys)
  • Somebody to Love (Queen)

*with thanks to Peter Larsen of the Orange County Register for the full deets above.

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Making the most of spare time

i will not spend all my spare time on flickr

Tom Hodgkinson in today’s Style magazine in the Sunday Times raises some interesting challenges to the way we spend our spare time in the modern world. Are we making the most of it? Or are we squandering what little time we do have to ourselves, falling into the trappings of convenience?

His opening lines below and, as they did for me, may ring scarily true:

“What do you do in your spare time? Maybe you indulge your precious moments of leisure with a £5 bottle of Chilean Sauvignon blanc and a DVD box set of Mad Men or The Wire. Or do you find yourself in front of a Champions League game, or the Brits, or the latest episode of Glee, with your phone locked to Twitter in one hand, the remote control in the other? Or are you on Facebook status-updating, or discussing house prices and schools over a “kitchen supper”, or getting competitive over YouTube — who has the funniest clips? (I always feel a bit disappointed when other people don’t seem to find the clips I like as funny as I do. But anyway.) Perhaps you might go for a little eBay surfing or browsing on Net-a-porter. Later, you’ll nod off with your new Stieg Larsson book.

Yes, well, it’s the modern world, and I suppose we have to live with it. But couldn’t we be doing something more satisfying in our spare time?”

Ringing any bells? Tom offers a plethora of more worthwhile, simple pursuits that might offer more fruitful development of the mind and body, without huge expense or dramatic lifestyle change – such as learning to sing or sew, getting into the garden, learning a language or how to play an instrument, or simply drinking good wine.

I’m also reading Nicholas Carr’s The Shallows at the moment – a fascinating and worthwhile read about how the universal expansion of the internet into every facet of our daily lives is essentially re-shaping the way our brains work. We have smaller attention spans; we find it harder to get lost in lengthy pieces of text; we jump from one communication to another and depend on a constant feed of information to keep us occupied.

Perhaps we could do with putting down the mobile, switching off the TV and shutting down the inbox every now and then. Sometimes it’s tiny changes that can dramatically change our quality of life. Food for thought.

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68th Annual Golden Globes – 2011 winners

Golden Globes

A night of success for David Fincher’s Facebook movie The Social Network dominated the movie award winners at last night’s ceremony in L.A, including the immensely talented Aaron Sorkin picking up his much-deserved screenplay award. As for the Televisual side of things, Glee stormed it for the second year running, with the adorable Chris Colfer picking up his Best Supporting Actor award on his first nomination:

Big congrats to the Brit flying the flag for us – Colin Firth – who walked away with his Best Actor gong for The King’s Speech.

MOTION PICTURE CATEGORIES:

BEST MOTION PICTURE, DRAMA
The Social Network

BEST MOTION PICTURE, MUSICAL OR COMEDY
The Kids Are All Right

FOREIGN LANGUAGE PICTURE
In a Better World, Denmark

BEST DIRECTOR
David Fincher, The Social Network

BEST DRAMATIC ACTOR
Colin Firth, The King’s Speech

BEST DRAMATIC ACTRESS
Natalie Portman, Black Swan

BEST ACTOR, COMEDY OR MUSICAL
Paul Giamatti, Barney’s Version

BEST ACTRESS, COMEDY OR MUSICAL
Annette Bening, The Kids Are All Right

SUPPORTING ACTOR
Christian Bale, The Fighter

SUPPORTING ACTRESS
Melissa Leo, The Fighter

ANIMATED FILM
Toy Story 3

SCREENPLAY
Aaron Sorkin, The Social Network

ORIGINAL SCORE
Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, The Social Network

SONG
You Haven’t Seen the Last of Me’ (music and lyrics by Diane Warren), Burlesque

TELEVISION CATEGORIES:

DRAMATIC TV SERIES
Boardwalk Empire

BEST ACTOR, TV DRAMA
Steve Buscemi, Boardwalk Empire

BEST ACTRESS, TV DRAMA
Katy Sagal, Sons of Anarchy

TV SERIES, MUSICAL OR COMEDY
Glee

BEST ACTOR, TV MUSICAL OR COMEDY
Jim Parsons, The Big Bang Theory

BEST ACTRESS, TV MUSICAL OR COMEDY
Laura Linney, The Big C

BEST MINISERIES OR MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Carlos

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A MINISERIES OR A MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Claire Danes, Temple Grandin

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A MINISERIES OR A MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Al Pacino, You Don’t Know Jack

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTRESS IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A SERIES, MINISERIES OR MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Jane Lynch, Glee

BEST PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE IN A SERIES, MINISERIES OR MOTION PICTURE MADE FOR TELEVISION
Chris Colfer, Glee

CECIL B DEMILLE LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS
Robert De Niro

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Burn The Floor – London opening night

Burn The Floor

The Shaftesbury Theatre stage was scorched to a crisp on Monday night as dance sensation Burn The Floor sashayed into London’s West End to a rapturous audience, deserving every moment of the standing ovation that greeted its prolonged curtain call.

Dancers from all over the world – Cuba, Russia, Australia and the US – performed an incredible high energy set, combining fiery Latino beats with the sultry swing of the jazz era, breaking fresh ground in the arena of professional dance. And it’s infectious. I was almost salsa-ing down the office to get my morning tea yesterday, humming Proud Mary as I went.

I’m not sure I’ve ever seen such a powerful display of dance – it’s evolution through the ages, its traditions and the deconstruction of such – ever before on the stage. For any dance fans it’s a no-brainer. But the sex that exudes from each couple and dance group throughout every number (and the general hotness of all the cast members) also guarantee it to be a great date night (boys, take note. You won’t be disappointed).

The history of the show is interesting. Having enjoyed an unexpected extended run on Broadway – a planned 6-week set turned into a 6-month long party – my knowledge of the show stemmed from its New York performance, but as I learned last night the roots of Burn The Floor are actually a lot closer to home.

Bournmouth was its starting point as a dance show, but its inception came about from the birthday party of a certain Sir Elton John. There, a group of dancers took ballroom to a whole new level, breaking down the barriers of tradition and setting new standards of combination dance. Producer Harley Medcalf saw a spark of brilliance in the concept, and Burn the Floor was born.

For me, and for the majority of the folk I spoke to in the bar afterwards, the second half is definitely a great deal stronger than the first, as most good shows should be. It’s faster, tighter and more highly energised. Aside from some cute swing numbers – particularly where one unstoppable fellow bites off more than he can chew, aiming to woo several women at the same time with his incredible dance moves – all my highlights fell in Act 2.

A rendition of Cariño is belted out by the female vocalist, followed by some fierce Spanish flamenco. The pace then drops for the achingly beautiful modern piece, set to male vocals of ‘I Burn For You’. The peace is promptly shattered by the thundering drum beat that directly follows, where the stunning girls whip up a frenzied section in Chicago-style costumes, leading their leather pants-clad male counterparts in a chair-based routine.

The effect is a full on acceleration to the final numbers, which begin with a rousing rendition of Proud Mary – which, as all good Glee fans know, makes a guaranteed show-stopping number (and, Burn the Floor even features a Glee principal dancer, Janette Manrara, who opens the show).

The costumes are sensational, the music is foot-tappingly good. The band – hidden in shadows on a raised platform at the rear of the stage for most of the show – do an incredible job and the vocalists are a powerful addition. There were questions asked as to the live quality of all the music, given that at curtain call only a violinist, saxophonist and drummers were invited forward to take a bow, rather raising the question that some audio may have been a track. But not to the detriment of the performance.

For me (and, it seemed, most of the audience) the traditional ballroom bits were the least engaging, with the notable exception of an impressive mirroring number in the second act, where two perfectly synchronised pairs dance as one thanks to a cleverly placed mesh screen. But in a show that deconstructs the very traditions of ballroom, perhaps this is as it should be.

Ali Bastian and Brian Fortuna

Although I couldn’t finish without a mention of the stars, Strictly‘s Ali Bastian & Brian Fortuna, it does rather speak volumes that I find myself getting this far with a need to mention their involvement. Talented they clearly are, and yes they make a (somewhat sickly sweet) cute couple – so much so in fact, that I couldn’t help feeling their waltz numbers served more to indulge and celebrate their much-publicised romance that burgeoned under the Strictly glitter ball than they did actually contribute to the show.

As Prince & Princess of Strictly, they may rule the floor, but against the backdrop of immense dance ability and experience that Burn The Floor offers, one couldn’t help but feel they were rather superfluous to proceedings. For me, leading men and ladies need to lead, and last night they couldn’t help but follow – not from a lack of talent per se, but simply because the bar was already raised so high.

That said, if their involvement speaks to Strictly fans and provides bums on seats, then I wish them well. And there are reasons a plenty to go and see this show, entertainment TV star names aside.

Burn the Floor is enjoying a limited run at The Shaftebury Theatre until early September. Book now through Ticketmaster or by calling the theatre on +44 (0)20 7379 5399

www.burnthefloor.com

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And That’s How Sue C’s… Madonna’s Vogue

Has any fan of the global phenomenon that is Glee NOT seen the Sue Sylvester/Madonna Vogue video yet?

If this charm that opens the second season has somehow passed you by, please PLEASE check it out. It is beyond comedy.

Click here to watch the full video on the official Glee website on Fox.com

The episode will air in the UK later this month.

Madonna is apparently such a huge fan of the hit U.S. show, that she gave the producers ‘free reign’ over her catalogue of pop hits. Not only will the season opener dedicate its premiere to the Queen of Pop, but the whole cast – including Lea Michele (Rachel), Cory Montieth (Finn) and Dianna Agron (Quinn) – are due to release an album of Madonna covers, entitled ‘The Power of Madonna’ later this year.

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Glee – episode 101: the verdict?

Judging by the online buzz from traditional outlets and social media sources like, this is a show that is here to stay. While savvy marketers in the US announced FOX’s confirmation of a second season coincidentally on the very same day Season 1 was due to air in the UK, the Brits lapped up the first helping of Glee with unabashed, well, glee.

It even struck a chord with the dry wit of Times critic Caitlin Moran, who shared with her Twitter followers earlier today,

It’s VERY silly and VERY funny and VERY bitchy, and ends with an inspiring version of Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believing.”

Even Peaches Geldof told the world she was “Loving Glee” during the airing of the double’s bill’s second episode.

Truth be known, I’ve been rooting for this show since the summer due to the widely available and questionably legal internet sources for the show. What makes me feel better about that is my dedication to watching the same episodes again on E4 regardless, as it seems legions of fans who came across the show under the same guise echo this dedicated (obsessive?) sentiment.

Ironically, this show about geeks – or rather, Gleeks – breeds popularity like an exponential snowball.

Already with SAG nomination, three Teen Choice nominations, a People’s Choice Award, and no fewer than four Golden Globe nominations (including Best Actress for Lea Michele and Best Actor for Matthew Morrison) under its belt, Glee is a cult show of the very highest order. And, having been on UK screens for less than 180 minutes total, that is quite some feat.

This is a show that somehow cynically mocks its own genre, whilst showing some real heart. It soaks up our modern susceptibility to self-absorbtion and squeezes the life out of it.At times this makes it a little too heavy on the soul-searching and the discovery of a true identity (among both the kids and the adults) – but what American High School-based show doesn’t? Glee stands apart in its remarkable self-awareness. Glee knows it pushes these boundaries, admits it and does so with humour, warmth and unashamed cheesy musical numbers. It never pretends to be anything else.

(c) FOX Broadcasting

But at the same time, it stops just short of being trite and clichéd at every opportunity where it could become just that. When we first meet doe-eyed Rachel, we think that the tried and tested She’s All That / Rachel Leigh-Cook / Geek-turned-popular-kid formula will play out to the end. But Rachel Berry falls short of being 100% likeable because she’s so darn highly strung. She’s a manicly dedicated perfectionist, who is both the stunning young ingenue that everyone roots for and intensely annoying at the same time. Sometimes you just want to slap her. No one ever really wanted to slap Laney Boggs.

The bunch of Gleeks are predictable mis-fits: Kurt is ridiculously gay; Artie is restricted from the full musical numbers by his wheelchair; Mercedes’ sassy spirit is the only thing bigger than her immense voice and frame. Yet often we see the strongest stereotypes either pushed beyond the reasonable boundary or given a dry comedic twist. The Cheer Coach is not just a slave-driver, she’s a masochist (“You think this is hard? Try living with Hepatitis, that’s hard”). Head Cheerleader, Quinn, is Captain of the Abstinence Club (thereby blowing out of the water all cheerleader stereotypes known to man). Finn, the typical Jock-turned-soul-searching-friend-of-the-geeks turns out to be the displaced son of an Iraq war fatality (well, they had to get the war critique in somewhere) while his friend Puck turns out to be even more of the clichéd jock-gone-soft than he is.

But frankly, what makes Glee is the music. Yes the young cast is immensely talented, the scripts are sharp, the dialogue cutting and the editing varied enough in style to make it a mixture of the American Office and Bring It On. But it is undoubtedly those powerful musical numbers that keep the critics and fans coming back for more. And that ultimately is what Glee club is all about.

*Join Glee’s UK Facebook group

*Follow Glee on Twitter (and cast members @frankenteen & @msleamichele)

*Watch episodes 1 & 2 on E4 catch up

*Buy the soundtrack (highly recommended)

*Audition as part of the producers’ open casting call for the next season!

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Glee – totally quotable

(c) FOX Broadcasting

It’s finally arrived. Glee. In the UK. On E4. Right now.

But before I start writing reams about how super-amazing it is (and I will), a few choice quotes from tonight’s first episode (of a double bill) to whet your appetites for the dry, dark humour of Ryan Murphy‘s newest treasure. Just a quick slice of the dialogue, a cynical, starkly insightful comment on popular youth culture:

“All these kids feel invisible. That’s why they all have a MySpace page.”
~ Mr. Schuester

“I have a phoner in a few moments. That’s an interview. On the phone. With a major media outlet.”
~ Sue Sylvester

“My MySpace page keeps me busy every minute of every single day. Fame is the most important thing in our culture. Being a part of something special makes you special, right?”
~ Rachel Berry

“You’re very talented. I should know. I’m very talented too.”
~ Rachel Berry

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