I N T E R N A T I O N A L
I N T E R N A T I O N A L
16 Pages Number 122 7th year
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Thursday, June 11, 2015
’Gigi’ starring Vanessa Hudgens on Broadway to close June 21
NEW YORK — “High School Musical” star Vanessa Hudgens will get a summer vacation — her Broadway show “Gigi” is closing.
Charles Sykes/Invision/AP
Vaness Hudgens, left, Victoria Clark and the cast of “Gigi” perform at the 69th annual Tony Awards at Radio City Music Hall on Sunday, June 7, 2015, in New York.
Hudgens made her Broadway debut in the title role but the reviews were poor and the box office never soared. It will play its final show June 21 after about 100 performances. “Gigi,” set in Paris at the turn of the last century, comes from Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Lowe. It centers on a teenage girl being groomed to serve as a mistress until she falls in love. The show only earned one Tony nomination, for Victoria Clark. Last week, the Neil Simon Theatre, where the show plays, was barely half-full and the show earned only 30 percent of its $1.3 million potential. (ap)
Lady Gaga cancels gig last minute as Tony Bennett ill
LONDON - A joint concert by pop diva Lady Gaga and veteran crooner Tony Bennett was cancelled at the last minute Tuesday because the 88-year-old was “taken ill”, London’s Royal Albert Hall announced. Just as the performance was due to begin, the iconic concert hall revealed on social media that it had been axed. “We’re very sorry to say that tonight’s concert has been cancelled due to Tony Bennett being taken ill. Apologies to disappointed fans,” the Royal Albert Hall Twitter account wrote. “We will contact all ticket-hold-
ers as soon as we have any more information. We would also like to wish Tony a speedy recovery.” Bennett, an American singer whose signature tune is “I Left My Heart in San Francisco”, later explained he was suffering from influenza. “Sorry to not be singing in London tonight,” Bennett wrote on Twitter. “I love my fans in the UK and appreciate all the well wishes to get over this flu quickly.” US Singer songwriter Lady Gaga, whose hits “Poker Face” and “Bad Romance” have topped charts around the world, reassured fans. “Hey everybody! Don’t worry
about Tony, he’s OK! That’s just showbiz sometimes. We’ll catch u next time, we got you!” she wrote on Twitter. It was the second of two concerts the pair were due to hold in support of WellChild, a charity that supports seriously ill children. Ahead of Monday’s performance, the two had joked together in front of press. Charity patron Prince Harry told Bennett “I can’t believe you have the energy I don’t know how you do it.” Lady Gaga, 29, laughed and replied: “He runs circles round me.” (afp)
Bigger teeth, scarier thrills revive a dormant ‘Jurassic World’
LOS ANGELES - The dinosaurs are bigger, the rides are scarier and there’s a dashing new leading pair as the main attraction: “Jurassic World” is open for business again and hoping to entice a new generation used to getting more bang for its movie buck. The film, out in U.S. theaters on Friday, revives the classic sci-fi action franchise that began with Steven Spielberg making dinosaurs come to life in 1993’s “Jurassic Park.” But two decades on, as Bryce Dallas Howard’s Claire slyly says in the film, no one is excited about seeing a dinosaur anymore. Yawn. That’s why the theme park in which “Jurassic World” is set needs to amp up the danger for visitors drawn by the adrenaline-fueled experience of getting up close and personal with dinosaurs.Mirroring the film’s attempt to reboot an old franchise with more thrills, the park has hatched a new hybrid creature attraction, the bigger, badder Indominus Rex, created in a lab from a test tube mix of dinosaurs. But the monster has a mind of her own, and as fans of the original franchise have learned, never turn your back on a dinosaur. “Good science fiction always holds a mirror up to current events, to our humanity,” director Colin Trevorrow told Reuters. “The Indominus Rex is a product of a desire for profit at all costs, and that very corporate need is something that can do a lot of harm and really compromise our ethics and humanity
in ways that we’ve seen consistently played out over time.” Made for $150 million by Comcast Corp-owned Universal Pictures, “Jurassic World” is projected to earn $121 million in its opening weekend, making it one of the year’s biggest debuts, according to BoxOffice.com. To play raptor trainer Owen, actor Chris Pratt said he embraced the “swagger” of the hero of one of Spielberg’s most recognizable films: rogue archeologist Indiana Jones. “You don’t have to necessarily remake ‘Indiana Jones’ to play that character,” he said. “He’s an adventurer, he’s got a contentious relationship with the woman who’s his polar opposite. This whole movie is very much an homage to Steven Spielberg’s work.”Trevorrow, directing his first big-budget film, said he was eager to twist character archetypes, with Pratt’s Owen initially playing a classic hero to Howard’s uptight and immaculately groomed Claire. It is Claire, however, who Trevorrow said drives the film. “I consider her the lead but it isn’t necessarily reflected that way in the marketing,” he said. The film’s campaign has focused on Pratt, a newly minted leading man with last year’s hit film, “Guardians of the Galaxy.” “When you would imagine the traditional hero to be the one riding in on his white horse and saving the woman who’s cowering with the children, we did it differently.” (rtr)
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Thursday, June 11, 2015 WHO recommends reopening South Korean schools closed over MERS Page 6
U.S., Serbia lead way into U-20 World Cup quarters Page 8
Suicide bomber targets ancient Egyptian temple in Luxor Page 13
’Not for Sale’ sign on Lepang Beach
SEMARAPURA - Lepang Hamlet’s proximity to Jalan Bypass Ida Bagus Mantra has made this area very attractive to businesses. Everything from small vendors to large resorts has set up shop on the land that was previously used by local people to grow rice. A ‘Not for Sale’ sign has recently been posted on what is left of the agricultural lands to the north of Lepang Beach, as an attempt to touch the hearts of the local people and have them not sell off their land. I Wayan Sujana known to local people as simply ‘Suklu’ feels that changes have occurred very rapidly since the bypass was built. Many of the people of Lepang customary village, particularly children and
elders, are not equipped to deal with the rapid development of the village. According to Sujana, the ‘Not for Sale’ sign installed on Lepang Beach has a message and represents
a philosophy of not handing land -owned by local people, over to others. As an artist, Sujana feels that all he can do to convince people not to sell their land is to touch people’s hearts. Although he recognizes that he cannot stop people from selling their land, he hopes that by speaking to their hearts through art, that they will choose not to give their land up to others. “As an artist, I knock at the door of people’s hearts through creativity. This action is better than doing nothing,” he said at his home on Wednesday.
According to Sujana, the ‘Not for Sale’ sign installed on the farmland of Lepang Beach is a satirical comment aimed at the resorts that have already been built to the west of this land. This is not to say that he is against any development in Lepang: “Not for Sale signs are not only posted as a comment on land use itself but also as a comment about culture which should also not be sold,” he explained. The Not for Sale sign was made on March 30 using a variety of media and was paraded from the mainland to the beach. This sign
will remain in place as a reminder to investors not to buy land that belongs to the community and also to remind locals in Lepang not become near spectators but instead to participate in the development of Lepang. (dwa) News can also be heard in “Bali Image” at Global Radio FM 96.5 from 9.30 until 10.00 am. Listen to Global Radio FM at http:// globalfmbali.listen2myradio.com or live video streaming at http://radioglobalfmbali.com and http:// ustream.tv/channel/global-fm-bali.
REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni
Cast member Chris Pratt poses at the premiere of “Jurassic World” in Hollywood, California, June 9, 2015. The movie opens in the U.S. on June 12.
IBP/Dewa Farend
A ‘Not for Sale’ sign has recently been posted on what is left of the agricultural lands to the north of Lepang Beach, as an attempt to touch the hearts of the local people and have them not sell off their land.