‘Zauberhaft!’ Conductor Marc Albrecht is back for the forgotten opera ‘Königskinder’

For a moment it is as if we have stepped back in time, because suddenly thereis conductor Marc Albrecht on the stage again, with his characteristicconducting style, the athletic way in which he bends his knees when he wantsthe orchestra to play softer, the approving thumb which he subtly raises to aninstrument group. Like he never left.

Marc Albrecht (Hannover, 1964) was chief conductor of Dutch National Opera andNedPhO between 2011 and 2020. He was hired after making an indelibleimpression with Strauss’ Die Frau ohne Schatten. He would conclude hisAmsterdam period with the same opera, before passing the baton to LorenzoViotti. But the first corona lockdown prevented that series of performances,so that Albrecht’s farewell was limited to one concert in the Concertgebouwwith thirty musicians who sat one and a half meters apart, for a handful oflisteners.

Zauberhaft!

This week Albrecht is rehearsing Konigkinder by Engelbert Humperdinck. Thefairytale opera had its premiere in New York in 1910 and is now staged inAmsterdam under the direction of Christof Loy. It is the first time that thesingers and orchestra members come together. Once the orchestra is playing,Albrecht barely interrupts them. As the morning progresses he notices thingslike: „Not espresso there, rather contemplativo ”, but the orchestra hasto make do with its body language.

They play the first act. A goose girl lives with a witch (sung by Albrechthimself for the occasion; the singer is recovering from corona), but then aking’s son comes into her life dressed as a tramp. It’s a fairy tale, so theyfall in love. In the NedPhO dome, King’s son tenor Daniel Behle at firststands casually with his hands in the pockets of his gray hoody, but graduallyhis sultry love song is carried away by his role and eventually he even jumpswith delight. “It’s an endless legato!” Albrecht insists. The seduction game,in which they almost kiss but just barely, gets so high that the goose girl’sgarland breaks. Then at the beginning of the twentieth century, Freud’sheyday, everyone immediately knows what time it is. „We are now incrediblytogether, but also irrelangam ,” says Albrecht with a grin to his singers.”That was zauberhaft!”

When we sit in the remarkably unglamorous DNO conductor’s room after therehearsal day (“I think that little gray fridge has been there as long as I’vebeen here”), Albrecht smiles ominously at the comment that things seemed to begoing very well that morning. the rehearsals.

Or did I misread your body language?

“It kept getting better. NedPhO is used to reacting quickly, often withoutusing words, which is great.”

We speak a mix of English and German. Albrecht can read Dutch, but hisknowledge has declined too much for speaking – although he does occasionallythrow in a Dutch word: “To be back is really a present.”

Why?

“It’s like I never left. And that’s great, because we can easily pick up thethread again. It feels like yesterday.”

Can you notice the musical influence of your successor in the orchestra?

“There are a few new key players, they are very good. That’s the biggestdifference. Furthermore, the orchestra plays as flexible and beautiful asalways. Lorenzo Viotti tends to a slightly different repertoire, but I can’tsay that anything remarkable in the sound of the orchestra is changing, notyet, and I’m happy about that, haha.”

The journey you go through in ‘Köningskinder’ is extremely intense

You don’t want your estate to end as soon as you walk out the door.

“Ah, I think a new conductor can only add something to the spectrum. I’mreally looking forward to the fact that we Die Frau ohne Schatten ifeverything goes through, still going to perform.”

So this is not a belated goodbye, but a continuation of the collaboration?

“Sure, that was always the plan. I am also so happy to be back in the city, inAmsterdam, I was so happy here.”

The corona time has not fundamentally changed him, says Albrecht.“Artistically I’ve stayed the same, except that I taught myself to play theorgan in my first year. I am more pessimistic about the state of the culture.Since corona, we have realized that culture is low on the priority ladder. Andopera house programming has become much more cautious. That’s why I’m sograteful that we Konigkinder were allowed to do. The management has notasked us to switch to a crowd puller like la traviata.”

Konigkinder fits exactly in Albrecht’s late romantic street. “After all theWagners we loved doing, Humperdinck now feels like a kind of lost relative.”

No Wagner Epigone

Engelbert Humperdinck (1852-1921), the friendly good guy who assisted Wagnerwith parsifal and his son Siegfried gave music lessons, is less well knownin the Netherlands than in Germany. But even there, where are opera Hanseland Gretel is mandatory Christmas food every year, state Konigkinder not onthe radar. The work premiered in New York in 1910, and has been rarelyperformed since. Even Albrecht has never attended a performance.

“That’s part of the joy you saw this morning. It was the first time I heardthe whole thing with the singers, as it should sound. And the same goes forthe musicians, no one had ever played a note of this piece. Wonderful.”

Konigkinder is darker than Hansel and Gretel. The loving couple is notgranted a long and happy life together. The inhabitants of the village beyondare looking for a new ruler, but do not recognize the two as the idealmonarchs that they are. They are chased away, the witch is burned, the duodie. Other than at Hansel and Gretel the opera is also through-composed. Sothere are no recognizable sing-alongs in it.

Yet it is also a mystery to Albrecht why this work is rarely performed.”Nobody understands it. It really is something not to be missed, no one whohas delved deeper into it will ever forget it. The journey you are goingthrough is extremely intense. The radiant beginning, the beauty of nature, thepurity of the goose girl – it is like a soap bubble, a paradisiacal scene.Were it not that the witch is holding her captive, of course. And then we getto the disaster of the second act, where everything goes wrong. And then wesink further into the black darkness. That turn to darkness is a powerfultheatrical fact that few pieces offer. And then those children’s voices at theend, that’s so unique. No, I don’t understand why this isn’t a standard work.I loved it from the first time I saw the score.”

When is the implementation successful for you?

„If it is clear that Humperdinck was much more than a Wagner epigone. youbelong in Konigkinder certainly his influence, but in the coming days I willfocus on getting the real Humperdinck sound out of the score duringrehearsals.”

What is typical Humperdinck?

“I am convinced that there are layers in it that Wagner has never touched.Take the chamber music. It contains so many beautiful solos for cello, violaand violin that Wagner has never used in his operas. Humperdinck also tried toincorporate children’s songs in this symphonic opera, just like the German artsong. He really works like a wizard.”

It requires a subtle balancing act from the musicians, because the very factthat Humperdinck feels like a lost family member can be a pitfall. “It’s likea false friend. It is the wrong track to keep thinking ‘ah yes, I know this,we play it like Wagner’. No, beware! It has a special kind of counterpoint andthe way he handles leitmotifs is also very different. And compared to Wagnerwe hear more lyrical voices here; Humperdinck does not use a hero tenor or ahero baritone. That’s a remarkable difference. The purpose of the performancebecomes to make this sound like a style in its own right. Of course you alsohear Brahms in it, you hear Schubert, you hear Bach. But the piece as a wholeis unique. It really is a masterpiece.”

Konigkinder by Engelbert Humperdinck with the Ned. Philh. orchestra. 6 to22 Oct at Dutch National Opera Amsterdam. Inl: operaballet.nl

World-famous rock sensation Ayreon announces new concert series

Ayreon, the global rock sensation from a tiny village in Brabant, hasannounced a new concert series after years of absence. The world-famous musicspectacle will return to Tilburg in September 2023 for three rare liveperformances, called Live Beneath the Waves. But while his fans are cheeringin the curtains, the mastermind from Brabant behind Ayreon is mostlyoverwhelmed by the tension.

A video on Facebook. Dark images from pop stage 013, with ominous, quasi Jaws-like music. A single man and a dog. The dates September 15, 16 and 17, 2023and a thumbs up. That’s it. But Arjen Lucassen from Oudemolen didn’t need morethan those 17 seconds to get his yearning fans foaming at the computer to bookairline tickets and hotel rooms.

Waiting for privacy settings…

Because his fans, from really all corners of the world, had to wait four yearsfor it. Out of necessity, according to Lucassen. “The concerts had a two-yearcycle. It started in 2015 with the theater production, in 2017 we did AyreonUniverse, in 2019 the Electric Castle shows followed and in 2021 we had bookedshows again in 013, but it soon became clear that that could not take placebecause of corona. If you depend on so many fans from abroad, we didn’t darethis year either. All those costs. Everything is getting more expensive.”Nevertheless, ‘Ayreon 013 2023’ did receive the green light. “It’s excitingand also a little scary.”

Lucassen wants to unpack. “This will be the biggest concert to date, with a10-piece band and about 20 vocalists. What fans can expect? A show from 2.5 to3 hours. Of course you want to spoil people who come from this far.”

“We perform the entire album ‘01011001’ and play some extra surprises in theencore. An Ayreon best-of? I don’t think so, actually. I think it’s more funto play songs I haven’t done yet. That’s more exciting.”

“When I pick up a guitar on stage, the nerves just don’t make a note come> out.”

It is not the first and certainly not the last time that he utters the words’scary’ and ‘exciting’. It draws the musician. For a world-renowned multi-instrumentalist with a wealth of experience, Lucassen is anything but aclassic rock star. Not a man who remodels a hotel room and hunts skirts, stifffrom drink and drugs. At 62, he still has just as much stage fright as in hisyoung, wild years. “Terrible,” he laughs. “Always had it. If it’s not aroutine, I just can’t play because of the nerves. I much prefer being in thestudio creating things. That’s why I started Ayreon and sit not in a bandeither. I haven’t rehearsed in 30 years. When I pick up a guitar on stage, itjust doesn’t come out.” Chuckling: “All I do is sing. And I can’t really singat all.”

“Other bands are touring. I’m just a terribly antisocial recluse and just> let the whole world come here.”

What is he most looking forward to? “When it’s just over,” he says with awink. “If everything went well, I’ll play my last note and we’ll get into thedressing room. That euphoria, that feeling, is really unbelievable.” Justlike, continues the Ayreon foreman, the warm glow of 3000 fans descending onhim. “Those people are so happy that you are playing live again. It’s actuallysuper selfish. Other bands tour and go to their fans. I’m just a terriblyantisocial recluse and just let the whole world come here,” Lucassen laughsout loud.

“Again: going to a show is a real hell for me, but after a show I go crazywith the band and fans. I just have to hold on to that feeling.”

Tickets for Live Beneath the Waves go on sale on October 27. A ticket costsabout 70 euros. There is room for a total of 9,000 visitors over the threeevenings.

ALSO READ: _ _ Nobody knows Arjen, but as Ayreon he attracts 12,000 rock fans to pop center013

Long queues of fans in Tilburg for a unique concert of Brabant rock great

Review: De Dijk’s last dance in Ziggo Dome (concert)

‘The last chance to see De Dijk’, that is how the first Ziggo Dome show wasannounced. Then another mega concert went on sale. And another one. Andanother one. And this is how we will be at the fifth goodbye show of Huub vander Lubbe and his on Monday hot rocking unit (according to Solomon Burke).With more than three thousand performances over 41 years, everyone has had thechance to see this band play – from brown bar to barn to pop temple – but thislast time is extra special, we want to be there. Or in De Dijk jargon: ‘Dear,put on something nice!’

Photography Mick de Jong

‘I don’t want to become an annual outing,’ Huub van der Lubbe explained hischoice to stop in de Volkskrant. An understandable reason, but let’s behonest: the band had been on that annual outing for at least fifteen years. Afixed value on the concert agenda for visitors, bookers and last but not leastfor the bar turnover of the pop venues (everyone drinks beer in the café, butcertainly also at a concert by De Dijk). That the public has always continuedto rejuvenate is apparent on Monday evening in Ziggo Dome: every father hasbrought his daughter and every mother her son. Nevertheless, the atmosphere isdetermined by the elderly who are eagerly filming the back of the person infront of them – with flash. It’s been nice, you think.

The most fit boomer in this concert hall is without doubt Huub van der Lubbe(69) himself. And what a pleasure it is to see him again with all his typicaltraits. Those cranky motor skills, the tense neck muscles, the raised handsand crazy convulsions with every stress: a wooden soul man on track. “Goodto have you all here,” he says repeatedly. ‘Unbelievable, five times the ZiggoDome…’ And he knows that there will be a big (already sold out before corona)club tour, in which he will have to say goodbye to a new crowd every night.Cry a little every night. To die every night – just for a moment. Thatrealization can be read on his face, mixed with the will to flame one moretime.

And that’s what the band does in Amsterdam, with a blistering Het Beste Vanshow. Make it happen tonight , Enter without knocking , If she is notthere , Nobody in town … how many bands can put together such a series ofNederpop classics in the first half hour of their 2.5 hour set? Carelesslyalmost. All songs that are full of the fine, catchy phrases and wisdom withwhich Van der Lubbe has enriched Dutch culture over the past four decades.”Although it always comes down to love,” he confesses. Just look at the setlist: What a woman can ‘t do. Big heart. Hold me. I can not do italone... De Dijk’s oeuvre is one long plea for love and affection. “Love,love, as long as you love each other.”

That saying goodbye also means looking back is apparent from the countlessmemories that Van der Lubbe recalls during the evening. Sometimes subtly, forexample by wearing a shirt of their deceased ‘youth hero and friend’ SolomonBurke under his shirt, sometimes also in the form of an extensive anecdote.For example, about De Dijk’s first single, which was released exactly fortyyears ago and mercilessly flopped despite the sky-high expectations. ‘No. 30in the Tipparade’, the singer remembers. ‘And when you hear it now, youunderstand why…’, after which his band Bleeding Heart effort. Precisely inthis cracker, the singer seems to have lost his lyrics. ‘You know the lyrics alot better than I do’, he grins afterwards.

The band swings and jokes effortlessly through its goodbye moment. The pain ofsaying goodbye – and the fact that the rest of the band would have liked tocontinue – can be read between the lines and you can see it in the symbolismwith which the evening is built. from opener Good to see you again (‘Whathappens next, I can’t count on it’) to Don ‘t let it be over (‘What you’velost, you’ll never forget’). And of course in closing Can the lights beturned off , which is definitively enough. ‘Enough seen today’, concludes Vander Lubbe before the lights go out. Pop! Lights out, end of show. ‘I’m notgood for anything’, he sighed two songs ago. Looking back on 41 years of DeDijk, that is not so bad.

And what if the new James Bond comes from Spain? 12x contenders!

MADRID – Daniel Craig surprisingly said goodbye as 007 in 2021 in the 25thJames Bond film and the search for a replacement has already started. The endof the film ‘No Time to Die’ is open so there can be a male, female, withAfrican roots, gender neutral or … Spanish speaking James Bond. Suppose theproducers choose an ‘espia español’ and ‘zero zero siete’ who could that be?

The chance is of course very small but who knows, if the new James (or Jane)Bond might be a woman or a James Bond with African roots, why not a James (orJuan) Bond from Spain? Spanish is a world language and Spanish-language seriesand movies are very popular thanks to Netflix, among others.

Below we list several Spanish popular male actors who could turn into 007 justlike that (again, the chances are slim). We’ll skip Antonio Banderas (becauseof his age), Javier Bardem (once a Bond movie villain) and Santiago Segura(known as police officer Torrente).

The contenders

1. Mario Casas

Born 1986 in Galicia. This actor has now played roles in 15 films and 6series, some of which can also be seen on Netflix. It is not known how goodhis English is, but it is known that he is in the list of 15 famous andhandsome Spanish actors.

2. Jesus Castro

Born 1993 in Cadiz. They sometimes call him the Spanish Paul Newman because ofhis look. Netflix viewers may know him because of the Spanish series ‘Mar deplástico’ and the movie ‘La isla mínima’. The disadvantage of Jesus Castro (myname is Castro, Jesus Castro) is that he doesn’t have blue eyes like a JamesBond should have.

3. Miguel ngel Silvestre

Born in 1982 in Castellon de la Plana. Known from several Netflix series andmovies such as ‘Sense8’, ‘Narcos’ and ‘Sky Rojo’ and certainly handsome enoughto play a James Bond with Spanish style. He speaks good English which is aplus for a British spy right?

4. Andrés Velencoso Segura

Born in 1978 in Tossa de Mar. Andrés once had an (almost) real Bond girl as agirlfriend, Kylie Minogue, but now he is known for his modeling work and muchless for his acting (which is not so good).

5. Ruben Cortado

Born 1984 in Cuba. Ok, he is technically not a Spaniard but he should not bemissing on this list. James Bond has often been to Cuba so that would befamiliar territory for Rubén. Rubén is better known as a model for Jean-PaulGaultier, Jaguar and Roberto Verino, among others, than as an actor … could bea downside.

6. Alex Gonzalez

Born in 1980 in Madrid. This actor is known for many Spanish series that havenot been seen beyond the borders of Spain, but he has also played roles in themovie ‘X-Men’ and that is no stranger. So he is known as a superhero, butwould he also be a good James Bond? In any case, at the age of 15 he studiedEnglish in the United Kingdom.

7. Maxi Iglesias

Born 1991 in Madrid. Known for his roles in Spanish television series andmovies but little international experience. Still, because of his look, hecould be a good Juan Bond. Still, some Netflix viewers may recognize him forroles in “Velvet,” “Paquita Salas,” Velvet Colección, “Valeria” and “LaCocinera de Castamar.”

8. Yon Gonzalez

Born 1986 in Guipuzcoa. Yon may be known to some readers for his roles inSpanish series that can be found on Netflix such as ‘Gran reserva’ and ‘GranHotel’. He even received an international award in New York.

9. Quim Gutierrez

Born in 1981 in Barcelona. This Spanish actor can be seen a lot on Netflix soa large international audience will know him from ‘El Vecino’ (The Neighbour)where he already plays a superhero, ‘Te quiero imbecil’ or ‘Primos’. However,he is a bit of a bumbling actor who doesn’t exude much confidence like DanielCraig shall we say.

10. Dani Rovira

Born in 1980 in Malaga. If the producers of James Bond are looking for acomedic version of 007, Dani Rovira is the right place for them. This actor isvery popular in Spain and known as a comedian or presenter, but he can alsoact in serious films. Would he be suitable as James Bond…. I have no idea, butthe comic part is fine.

11. Javier Bardem

Recently it became known that the producers of the James Bond films think thatan English spy should not be too young. Well that’s possible, Spain also hassome older James Bond candidates such as 53-year-old Javier Bardem. Theproblem with this actor is that exactly ten years ago in 2012, he was also thevillain in the movie ‘Skyfall’.

12. Antonio Banderas

Who doesn’t know this ‘Zorro’ actor. World-renowned and highly experiencedwith roles in dozens of Hollywood movies. Perhaps the 62-year-old Banderas isa bit too old for the James Bond saga, but at least he is a familiar face. Andthat can also work against him, James Bond is then too easily compared to’Zorro’ or ‘Evita’ or ‘Spy Kids’.

Van der Laan & Woe about bad jokes and criticism: ‘Then I’ll eat foie gras. Come here with that goose!’

‘What a week that will be,’ says Jeroen Woe (41). And that while they don’treally feel part of the showbiz world and they kind of hate premieres, saysNiels van der Laan (41). Because yes, being reviewed remains difficult. Whenasked how he can deal with that: “Moderate. Two stars for me.”

It is not without reason that we talk about dealing with and the consequencesof criticism, because that is the theme of their new cabaret program NG.Part of this topic arose from responses to their wildly popular TV show Untilhere successor to the equally successful The Quiz. Van der Laan: “We noticefrom the reactions to that that some subjects are very sensitive.”

In NG we see the ‘theater-Jeroen’ and the ‘theatre-Niels’, as they call itthemselves: they are not themselves, but they play themselves. Just like theyplay a collector, a confidant, a well-known singer and a doctor. Theperformance is a biography of Jeroen Woe and the mysterious title of theperformance appears to be the phonetic rendering of his surname in Chinese.”We had a lot of fun with the idea of ​​making a performance about one of usas a duo,” said the main character.

Van der laan & Woe – NG. Premiere 8 Oct, Stadsschouwburg Haarlem. Touruntil June 17. Inl: vanderlaanenwoe.nl

We hear about Woe’s Chinese and Jewish background and about his history withcancer. That makes Woe a ‘Jewish cancer Chinese’, concludes Van der Laanhalfway through the performance. This may sound insulting, but in theperformance Woe believes that he can derive certain rights from thisqualification: he should be allowed to make jokes about Chinese people, Jewsand cancer that the traditional Dutch Niels van der Laan is not allowed tomake.

In a motley collection of sketches, songs and set changes, we see what happensto someone who is not used to being criticized. What was the source ofinspiration for this?

Woe: “In recent years, people who have always had the highest jobs and themost opportunities suddenly received criticism. On discrimination issues,metoo, sustainability. You saw that they were not used to that and often couldnot deal with it at all. That criticism is often justified, of course, but wethought it was interesting to go a step further: it is simply not nothing ifyou receive criticism and are not used to it.”

If you make a rude joke on TV that puts a group away, you also kind of say> that you’re okay with that happening

Van der Laan: “What we find so fascinating is what criticism sometimesproduces. If people have heard enough times that they are racist, they becomeone. At first they weren’t, but that’s what criticism does: it breakssomething. You saw it very nicely with the people who blocked the highway afew years ago as a pro Zwarte Piet demonstration. They were told that theywere racist and then responded along the lines of: go back to your owncountry.”

Who is to blame in this story?

Van der Laan: „We are concerned with the way in which the debate is conducted.I am also against Zwarte Piet, but you may wonder whether it is wise todismiss people as racist. [Van der Laan speelt sinds 2018 de rol van‘hoofdpiet’ in het Sinterklaasjournaal , waar sinds 2019 geen zwarte pietmeer in voorkomt, red.] It’s just like people talking about ‘cunt Moroccans’.If I were called that, it wouldn’t make me behave any better.”

Woe: “There’s nothing harder than being criticized for how you’ve always doneit. You see that with the Zwarte Piet protesters, but also when someone iscommented on his origin. The result is such a fundamental uncertainty. Thisoften manifests itself in anger and unreasonableness.”

In the performance Jeroen tries to be more authentic in response to criticism,but he actually achieves the opposite.

Van der Laan: „We really wanted the Jeroen in the performance to radicalize inbeing authentic. If I’m only allowed to find something about what I really am,then I’m going to be all that, is his reasoning. We had to think a bit of menlike Johan Derksen. One of his last riots was about that candle, but you cansense that his stories will get more and more extreme. It’s not even aboutwhether those stories are true, it’s just his counter-reaction to what he seesas crazy correctness.”

Going on your mouth in the theater hurts less when people like your TV show

Your performance contains various sketches about political correctness: we seea conversation at the hairdresser, a collector at the door. Do you think weare going too far in correctness?

Woe: “Sometimes. I do get annoyed by people who say that you should first reada very thick book about slavery, before you can say something about racism.”

Van der Laan: „I think it is okay to disapprove of racism if you have not readsuch a book. But you should not then become the advocate of less racism,because then you don’t have that card.”

Woe: “I think we sometimes go too far in correctness, but that will straightenout on its own. Sometimes things get out of hand, but that doesn’t mean theinitial idea isn’t right.”

Van der Laan: “That is our substantive starting point for many scenes in theperformance. It is about the superlative that often follows in response tocriticism. Like: Oh, I can’t eat meat anymore? And I’m certainly not allowedto drink cow’s milk anymore?”

Woe: „The reflex is then often even more radical: Then I will eat foie gras.Come here with that goose!”

Do you recognize that reaction?

Woo: “Certainly. I found writing certain scenes quite confronting. I recognizethe anger when you see everyone sitting in Ibiza on Instagram while you doyour best not to fly. I’m learning more and more that you shouldn’t let thingslike that get you down. You have to set your own limits and use your commonsense.”

We stole the convenience of telling something to a room from TV

When it comes to too much correctness there is also hypocrisy or hypocrisylurking.

Van der Laan: “That’s right, that’s also in the performance. We have tried tomake Jeroen use everything to show that he is good. That is actually areaction to a strange phenomenon: as a society we have agreed that you aregood if you do certain things in public. For example, appearing on TV withyour children or telling about the war. Then people automatically think: thatis a good person. While that doesn’t necessarily have to be true.”

Woe: “Such a Marco Borsato who went to sing a song on TV with his daughter.Abusing your children in such a way to show that you are good yourself, I findthat so bad.”

In your performance you sometimes make quite serious jokes. Do you dare morein the theater than in ‘Even tot hier’?

Woe: “I think different rules apply in the theatre. We also really enjoypushing the boundaries on TV, but I do think you have a certainresponsibility. If you make a rude joke on TV that puts a group away, you alsokind of say that you’re okay with that happening.”

Van der Laan: „And an essential difference is that people cannot leave thetheater to get chips. Excerpts from Until here should be able to stand ontheir own because people can view them individually. We had to get used tothat in the beginning. In the theater we make quite a lot of bad jokes, but wedare to do that because people see the whole and can hopefully place it in acontext.”

Have you gotten better at the theater through your TV work?

Van der Laan: “I think so. We used to feel very much like a fourth wall in thetheater, while now we can pretend to be ourselves on stage much better. Wehave stolen the convenience of telling something to a room from TV.”

Woe: “We are now more daring in the theater. Going on your mouth hurts alittle less if you know that people already like your TV show.”

Van der Laan: „Due to the frantic pace at which we Until here By the way, wehave also started to work much more efficiently for our theater performances.”

Until here can be seen weekly on NPO1 from Saturday 12 November.Thursday October 6 makes Until here chance to win the Golden Televizier

Multimillionaire sisters Charli and Dixie hated each other: ‘Didn’t speak for weeks’ | show

Sisters Charli (18) and Dixie D’Amelio (21), the highest-earning TikTok starsin the world, almost missed the multimillion-dollar success of theircollaborations. The two hated each other for years, they now reveal.

“We hated each other, we really hated each other,” Dixie confessed this weekon actress Drew Barrymore’s talk show. “We often didn’t speak for weeks.” Thesisters had adjoining bedrooms and “shared a wall,” but their bond didn’t goany further, Charli said.

When they went to high school around the age of fourteen, everything changed.”It came out of nowhere,” Dixie says. ,,We became best friends, she came toparties with me every weekend.” The two still have a good relationship and noweven live together. “I can’t even remember our last fight,” Dixie said.

Their also well-known parents Heidi and Marc, seen with their daughters in thereality series The D ‘Amelio Show, it is better to stay away if theiroffspring do get into trouble. “They just make it worse,” Dixie says. AndCharli: ,,Then they ask: what are you arguing about? While our fight is longover. We were done with it ten minutes ago.”

Dixie and Charli D’Amelio. © BrunoPress/Capital Pictures

Multimillionaires

The good bond between the sisters is not only beneficial for the atmosphere,but also for their bank account. Dancing and miming brought them millions offollowers, now dancing and miming with products in their hands also earn themmillions of euros. TikTok stars sometimes ask 440,000 euros for one post inwhich they promote a product, according to business magazine Forbes.

With income of 15.4 million euros (for Charli) and 8.8 million euros (forDixie), the sisters were the highest-earning TikTokkers in the world lastyear. They work separately from each other, but especially often together, forexample on their fashion brand Social Tourist.

Charli was the undefeated queen of the video platform in terms of followersfor a long time, but that time is over. Last summer, prankster Khaby Lame,known for his dry reaction videos, passed her by. He currently has over 150million followers, Charli ‘only’ 147 million. Dixie has to make do with morethan 57 million fans.

Continue reading below Khaby Lame ‘s post:

Nevertheless, Charli remains attractive for major brands, because she herselfis part of the target group that they like to reach with advertisements. Todayshe showed how she shines in a new campaign from luxury brand Prada:

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Also listen to the AD Media Podcast with this week Angela de Jong ‘s reactionto the much-discussed scene in Five live, the panel disagrees about Wietze deJager’s parental leave and Rampvlucht is discussed. Listen below or subscribevia Spotify or iTunes.

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Simon Cowell: King of the talent show is monetizing his empire

It’s been two years, but the most feared judge of English-language talentshows has a unique deal in place. Together with the investment company ACF, hehas turned the rights of his television company Syco into an investmentproduct, thus suddenly securing £90 million, without losing his grip on themultinational.

It’s another step in which Cowell, who turns 63 next week, is slowly butsurely pulling out of the music and television industry. The success of someof his major talent show formulas wears off.

The essence

  • Simon Cowell has sold some of the rights to his key TV concepts. * As a result, the rights of, among others, ‘Got Talent’ and ‘X Factor’ ended up with the investment company ACF. * Cowell is not only the creator of modern television talent shows, but also a feared judge.

But for the past twenty years, Cowell has ruled the return of the televisiontalent show. That started in 2001, when he developed the TV concept for the’Pop Idol’ singing competition together with Simon Fuller, in which he was theabsolute trendsetter as a strict jury member.

Big Brother

‘I don’t want to be rude, but…’ is a dreaded opening statement by jury memberCowell, after which a damning verdict was usually passed. The phraseconveniently became the title of Cowell’s 2004 autobiography. Partly due toCowell’s unvarnished criticism, the program became an instant success. Itcould easily compete with the then ubiquitous versions of ‘Big Brother’, bythe Dutch production house Endemol.

‘Pop Idol’ turned out to be an excellent export product: it is still runningin 69 countries. In our country, VTM broadcast it under the name ‘Idol’. But’Pop Idol’ was less than three years old when Cowell launched an improvedversion of the program with ‘X Factor’, where the judges compete for the bestcandidates. There was no longer any internal competition for Cowell: he nolonger had to share the proceeds with Simon Fuller.

70 million

albums

Cowell’s boy band One Direction sold more than 70 million albums in just overfive years.

‘X Factor’ led to one of Cowell’s greatest inventions: the boy band OneDirection. The five members took part in the program independently in 2010,but they were not assessed well enough individually. Cowell saw potential inthe combination of the five boys and forged the group. In the six years thatthe group existed, they sold 70 million albums.

strangulation contracts

The television talent shows were an immense financial success. First of all,through the income from the sale of the rights around the world. Butparticipants also immediately had to relinquish all conceivable rights totheir music and performances to the program producer. Winners were obliged tohave their music and performances go through Cowell’s record company:strangulation contracts according to critics.

For ‘X Factor’, Cowell entered into a joint venture with the music arm ofglobal music giant Sony. The combination of the television success of thetalent shows and the subsequent sale of the winners’ music, digital orotherwise, was a golden egg. Since 2004, Syco, as the joint venture betweenCowell and Sony is called, has scored 500 top 10 hits worldwide and sold morethan 250 million records.

divine status

Cowell really achieved divine status in the television world when he was ableto re-imagine the talent show formula from 2007 with the ‘Got Talent’ formula,preceded by the name of the country where the series was broadcast.

The biggest difference with ‘Pop Idol’ and ‘X Factor’ was that not onlysingers could participate, but all kinds of performing artists couldparticipate. Once again it became a worldwide hit. Here too, VTM bought theFlemish rights for ‘Belgium’s Got Talent’. Time magazine twice included Cowellin its list of the 100 most influential people on Earth.

Two years ago, Sony Music left Syco and acquired the music rights to theprograms. The television rights remained with Syco, which was henceforth fullycontrolled by Cowell. He said on Tuesday that he wants to focus more on hisfamily from now on. He will, however, remain active as a jury member. His networth is estimated at 400 million pounds (460 million euros).

Former ‘Scrubs and ‘Californication’ producer Eric Weinberg charged with 18 counts of sexual abuse and assault

counts of sexual abuse and assault

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Eric Weinberg, a co-executive producer and writer for the 2000s TV comedy_scrubs_ was arrested again on Tuesday and charged with 18 counts of sexualabuse and assault by the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.

The judgment was made days after charges — including rape, oral copulation,sexual battery, false imprisonment, assault by means to cause great bodilyharm and six counts of forcible penetration by a foreign object — were filed.He was taken into custody Tuesday at 2:30 pm and he was released after posting$5 million bail by midnight.

District George Gascon is expected to hold a pressconference laterthis afternoon to detail the charges against Weinberg, who also was a produceron Showtime’s California and FXs Anger Management.

Weinberg was initially arrested in July over charges including rape, allegedlycommitted between 2012 and 2019. He was released after posting $3,225,000bail.

(Photo:LAPD)

Eric Weinberg was arrested again on Tuesday and faces 18 sexual abuse andassault charges. (Photo: LAPD)

At that time, Los Angeles Police Department investigators said Weinbergappeared to have targeted women in their 20s and 30s in grocery stores, coffeeshops and other public places claiming to be a photographer. He allegedly setup photoshoots with them at his residence where he “would sexually assaultthem.” Authorities sought additional unidentified victims — as far back as theearly ’90s — urging them to come forward.

The Hollywood Reporter spoke to some of his accusers for a story that ran onSept. 1. More than two dozen women alleged a pattern of predatory behavior andmisconduct going back decades. Some of the allegations, as early as 2000 whenhe worked on scrubs included claims of inappropriate conduct involvingminors.

Many of the women said Weinberg, who received five Emmy nominations for hiswork on scrubs and Politically Incorrect With Bill Maher , used hisHollywood resume to establish credibility and then pressured them duringshoots into taking off their clothing. Multiple women alleged nonconsensualsexual activity and claimed he frequently photographed them during it.

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Weinberg previously avoided similar charges. He was arrested in 2014 when then22-year-old Kayra Raecke alleged to LAPD that he had raped her during aphotoshoot at his home. Raecke claimed Weinberg choked her with one hand andtook photos with the other. She told authorities she thought she may dieduring the alleged assault. The deputy district attorney at the time declinedto prosecute, citing “insufficient evidence.”

In 2016, law enforcement recommended charges against Weinberg for a differentalleged nonconsensual sexual encounter with an unidentified woman. Again, thedistrict attorney declined to charge because there was “no evidence that thedefendant used force, threats or intimidation.”

The Hollywood Reporter ‘s story said Weinberg kept records of hisencounters. In 2008, his then-wife Hilary Bidwell, allegedly found nudephotographs and papers with names and numbers of hundreds of women, many ofthem accompanied by locations — like grocery store, library, gym — where theymet. He said they were from past headshot shoots he would do. They separatedagain after Raecke’s allegation but didn’t formally divorce. Then in 2020, shestarted proceedings after a women reached out to her alleging Weinberg wasinappropriate with her minor daughter.

That drove Bidwell to hire a private investigation firm to see if there wereother accusers. She discovered a Facebook post by artist Claire Wilsoncautioning women against Weinberg, whom she accused of sexually assaulting herafter they met on OKCupid. Other women commented recounting their own allegedencounters with Weinberg. Several accusers have since banded together andretained an attorney.

Weinberg denied the allegations, previously releasing a statement to _THR_through his divorce lawyer, saying they vote from his bitter divorce.

“As we have unfortunately seen these days, time and again, a heavily litigatedand acrimonious custody dispute has now given rise to strategically placedcriminal allegations,” he said. “These claims have previously beeninvestigated and reviewed by both law enforcement and the Los Angeles familycourt and the results wholly undermine the narrative now being promulgated.Thought Mr. Weinberg himself is precluded from commenting on any aspect ofthis litigation due to court orders, family law rules and in the bestinterests of his minor children, he will continue through counsel to cooperatein all aspects of this investigation and, if necessary, will address theseallegations in the only forum that should matter — a public courtroom.”

5 Years After #MeToo, 4 Hollywood Men Face Trials This Month, From Harvey Weinstein to Kevin Spacey

Five years ago today, reporters Jodi Cantor and Meghan Twohey published“Harvey Weinstein Paid Off Sexual Harassment Accusers for Decades” in The NewYork Times, igniting a movement that would come to be known as #MeToo. Thatfiery reckoning brought forth new accusers and accused for months and yearsthereafter, but is far from burning out.

This week marks a convergence of several high-profile #MeToo cases, includinga final circling back to original villain Harvey Weinstein. The disgracedmovie producer, along with actor Kevin Spacey, director Paul Haggis and actorDanny Masterson, all face separate trials this month for incidents that cameto light when #MeToo was still raging.

Spacey’s trial begins first, in a federal court on Thursday in New York. Hehas been accused by fellow actor Anthony Rapp of an assault at Spacey’s homein Manhattan in 1986, when Rapp was 14. The “Rent” and “Star Trek” actor, thefirst to bring accusations against Spacey in 2017, is seeking $40 million inhis civil trial – the first time Spacey will face a jury after multiple menleveled accusations of misconduct against him.

Also Read: Kevin Spacey Will No Longer Star in Genghis Kahn Film in Light of SexualAssault Charges

Further allegations against Spacey led to criminal charges in the UK – wherehe pleaded not guilty this summer and faces a separate trial next June – aswell as being fired from Netflix’s “House of Cards.” A $31 million damageaward for “House of Cards” producer MRC over costs of writing him out of theNetflix series was upheld by a judge this summer.

The other three trials start next week.

Jury selection begins in Los Angeles next Wednesday for the second criminaltrial involving Weinstein, who was convicted third-degree rape and a first-degree criminal sexual act in 2020 in New York City. The former WeinsteinCompany head has been serving a 23-year sentence while awaiting appeal in thatcase. The Los Angeles criminal case, which is expected to run six weeks ormore, involves 11 new felony charges involving five women who accuse him ofsexual assault between 2004 and 2013. He faces up to 140 years in prison ifconvicted on all counts.

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Also Read: Harvey Weinstein Denied Trial Delay Despite ‘She Said’ Publicity, Judge Rules

Down the hall in that same downtown Los Angeles courthouse, Masterson isfacing criminal accusations from three women who claim they met the “That 70sShow” star through the Church of Scientology and were assaulted in the early2000s. If convicted, Masterson faces a maximum sentence of 45 years to life inprison in a trial that could last up to a month.

Lawyers for Masterson, a prominent Scientologist, had sought to exclude theChurch of Scientology and its influence from his trial.

Paul Haggis, however, successfully argued to have the role of Scientololgy_included_ in his trial since the former Scientologist intends to claim he’sthe victim of a smear campaign at the hands of the church he left and laterpublicly criticized.

The Oscar-winning “Crash” director was first accused of sexual assault in a2017 civil lawsuit brought by publicist Haleigh Breest, a case that wasdelayed nearly six years due to the pandemic and court backlogs. Four morewomen have since come forward with accusations – three in support of Breest’slawsuit, and a British national who accused Haggis of raping her in June at afilm festival in Italy, where Haggis may yet have to return to face charges.

In all likelihood, all four cases will be resolved before December.

Also Read: Paul Haggis Says Sexual Assault Accuser Appeared ‘Rehearsed’: ‘I MostCertainly Don’t Have a Problem With Women’

Alec Baldwin speaks out after reaching settlement with ‘Rust’ cinematographer Halyna Hutchins’s family

Alec Baldwin and the Peace producers have reached a settlement with thefamily of the film’s cinematographer Halyna Hutchins.

The deal, which is pending court approval, was announced Wednesday. Accordingto the terms, production of the film will resume in January with the movie’soriginal director, Joel Souza, at the helm. Matthew Hutchins, Halyna’swidower, will serve as executive producer.

The wrongful-death lawsuit was filed in February against producers, includingBaldwin, and crew members by Matthew, an attorney, and the couple’s minor son,Andros, laying out allegations of negligence — citing reckless behavior on theset, cost-cutting and misuse of firearms — around Halyna’s death on Oct. 21.She had been setting up a shot at the Bonanza Creek Ranch near Santa Fe, NMwhen Baldwin, the star of the film, was holding a vintage gun that fired.Baldwin claimed he didn’t pull the trigger, however, it discharged and the guncontained a live round — not a dummy or prop ammunition — that shot throughHalyna’s torso and then lodged in the shoulder of Souza. She was airlifted tothe hospital, where she was declared dead. Souza recovered.

“We have reached a settlement, subject to court approval, for our wrongfuldeath case against the producers of Peace , including Alec Baldwin and RustMovie Productions, LLC,” Matthew said in a statement to Yahoo Entertainment.”As part of that settlement, our case will be dismissed. The filming of_Peace_ which I will now executive produce, will resume with all the originalprincipal players on board in January 2023.”

It continued, “I have no interest in engaging in recriminations or attributionof blame (to the producers or Mr. Baldwin). All of us believe Halyna’s deathwas a terrible accident. I am grateful that the producers and theentertainment community have come together to pay tribute to Halyna’s finalwork.”

Baldwin commented on Instagram, writing, “We are pleased to announce today thesettlement of the civil case filed on behalf of the family of cinematographerHalyna Hutchins. Throughout this difficult process, everyone has maintainedthe specific desire to do what is best for Halyna’s son . We are grateful toeveryone who contributed to the resolution of this tragic and painfulsituation.”

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Frances Fisher, who appears in the film with Baldwin, commented on his postcalling it a “miraculous resolution” and a “relief.” She added, “So glad thatHalyna’s work will be seen.”

Baldwin’s attorney, Luke Nikas of Quinn Emanuel, also issued a statement to_Deadline_ saying, “Throughout this difficult process, everyone has maintainedthe specific desire to do what is best for Halyna’s son. We are grateful toeveryone who contributed to the resolution of this tragic and painfulsituation.”

An attorney for Rust Movie Productions, LLC, Melina Spadone of PillsburyWinthrop Shaw Pittman, told the same outlet, “We are pleased the parties cametogether to resolve this matter, which, subject to court approval, marks animportant step forward in celebrating Halyna’s life and honoring her work.”

Joel Souza, Director of Peace said, in part, “In my own attempts to heal,any decision to return to finish directing the film could only make sense forme if it was done with the involvement of Matt and the Hutchins family. Thoughcertainly bittersweet, I am pleased that together, we will now complete whatHalyna and I started. My every effort on this film will be devoted to honoringHalyna’s legacy and making her proud. It is a privilege to see this through onher behalf.”

This ends this particular lawsuit. Still pending is the final investigationreport from the Santa Fe Sheriff’s Office. Last month, New Mexico grantedfunds — more than $317,000 — to pay for possible prosecutions connected to thefatal shooting. Local District Attorney Mary Carmack-Altwies made theemergency request for the funds to go toward a special prosecutor, specialinvestigator, several experts and other personnel. The request noted that asmany as four people could face charges — and “one of the possible defendantsis well known movie actor Alec Baldwin.”

Baldwin has told ABC News in December that his legal team told him it’sunlikely he would be charged.

“I have been told by people who are in the know, in terms of even inside thestate, that it’s highly unlikely that I would be charged with anythingcriminally,” he said.

In August, Baldwin told CNN he “hired a private investigator” and based on thefindings, he doesn’t believe anyone will be criminally charged. He did saythat armor Hannah Gutierrez Reed, whose experience has been called intoquestion, and assistant director Dave Halls, who handed Baldwin the gun anddeclared it “cold,” meaning it had no live ammo, shouldn’t work on film setsagain .

“Why didn’t you [Gutierrez Reed] check that bullet? Why didn’t Halls obeyher?” Baldwin asked. “Why did he give me the gun? Why didn’t he check? Why didhe tell the crew [it was a cold gun]? … I’m pretty confident neither one ofthem should ever work in a film set again,” he said, adding, “I sincerelybelieve … [investigators are] going to say this was an accident. It’s tragic.”