Allan Williams, who set up Beatles' early gigs, dies at 86

samedi 31 décembre 2016

Allan Williams, a Liverpool music promoter who helped the Beatles get early gigs, has died. He was 86.

Graham Stanley, manager of the Jacaranda Club that Williams used to operate, said Saturday that Williams died Friday night. He did not have further details.

99s/19/huty/13342/12

An early incarnation of the Beatles can be seen here in front of the inscription 'Their Name Liveth For Evermore,' at the Arnhem War Memorial in the eastern Netherlands in 1960. From left to right are manager Allan Williams, his wife Beryl, Williams' business partner and calypso singer Lord Woodbine, Stuart Sutcliffe, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Pete Best. (Photo by John Lennon/Keystone Features/Getty Images)

Williams played an important role in finding the young Beatles club dates in Liverpool and in Hamburg, Germany, before they started on a long string of hits.

Williams took the band to Hamburg in 1960 for an extended series of shows there that honed their stamina and live skills.

He is sometimes described as their first manager. The band moved on to be managed by Brian Epstein, who helped propel them to stardom.

Former Beatle Paul McCartney has described Williams as "a great guy, a really good motivator."

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Allan Williams, who set up Beatles' early gigs, dies at 86

Arty party: cultural organizations fete Canada on its 150th

How do you throw a party for a country?

Canada will celebrate its 150th anniversary on July 1, 2017, and for many arts organizations, projects that honour and examine the country on its landmark birthday are well underway.

Here is a look at how five major Canadian cultural institutions are planning to celebrate.

Royal Conservatory of Music

What does Canada sound like in 2017? That's the question the Royal Conservatory of Music wanted to answer when it went looking for new Canadians with musical backgrounds to audition for a new orchestra.

"There are so many talented people here," Mervon Mehta, executive director of performing arts at the conservatory, said in an interview with CBC News.

He expressed frustration at seeing one professional musician after another play only within their communities, never getting the mainstream exposure they deserve. "So I want to bring them all together, all these talented people, and then see if we can create a new sound."

How the New Canadian Global Music Orchestra was born1:18

More than 100 people auditioned, and 12 made it. They come from countries as diverse as Burkina Faso, Ukraine and Brazil. These instrumentalists had to demonstrate not only musical aptitude, but also the ability to work with each other.

For many, that meant harmonizing with instruments that, in the words of Tibetan musician Dorjee Tsering, he'd "seen on YouTube only."

The New Canadian Global Music Orchestra will perform a concert at the Royal Conservatory's Koerner Hall in Toronto on June 2, followed by dates around the country and a residency at Alberta's prestigious Banff Centre in the fall.

National Ballet of Canada

A pointe shoe has symbolized ballet for centuries. A professional dancer like the National Ballet of Canada's Jillian Vanstone spends thousands of hours in them and goes through dozens of pairs in a year.

Now the ballet wants the shoes to take centre stage in a series of selfie-style photos snapped across Canada.

"We're sending 150 of these guys across the country to individuals, arts organizations, community groups," says Vanstone, surrounded by slippers at the National Ballet's "shoe room" in Toronto. "We're asking people to take a photo with a pointe shoe in recognizable Canadian locations."

The pictures will be posted on the National Ballet's website, cheekily telling a visual story about how the arts bind Canadians together coast to coast to coast.

Museum for Human Rights

In Winnipeg, the Canadian Museum for Human Rights also wants to exhibit user-generated photos. The images they're interested in are about not only beauty, but also hardship. Canadians are being asked to submit pictures that speak to the ongoing struggle for human rights.

Helen Delacretaz, director of exhibitions at the museum, says there are four categories of photos.

"We're looking for inclusion on diversity as well as reconciliation, freedom of expression and human rights and the environment, so far-reaching topics," said Delacretaz in an interview with CBC News.

The top pictures, selected by a jury, will be shown at the museum, and Delacretaz hopes the exhibition can travel across Canada. She says the more than 700 photos they've received have been extremely powerful.

National Arts Centre

One of the most ambitious Canada 150 plans belongs to the National Arts Centre in Ottawa. The NAC is sending its acclaimed orchestra to cities across Canada, as well as many productions of both its English and French-language theatre.

It is also inviting big names like Buffy Sainte-Marie and Rufus Wainwright to the festival in June and July.

"Canada Scene is going to be the largest art party in the country in 2017," says Heather Moore, NAC's executive director of the festival.

"We're inviting more than 1,000 artists from coast to coast to coast, from all provinces and territories, and they're going to be performing in more than 100 events in music, theatre, dance, visual arts, film and even culinary arts."

Toronto Symphony Orchestra

Among the Toronto Symphony Orchestra's many offerings for Canada's 150th, one stands out for its focus on the youngest Canadians.

DAM! The Story of Kit the Beaver will pair a new animated film with a live score performed by the TSO on Feb. 25 in a concert for children. Composer Erica Procunier wrote the score, which included sounds of animals, translated into music.

Erica Procunier

Composer Erica Procunier wrote the score that will be performed live to accompany the animated film DAM! The story of Kit the Beaver. (CBC)

"I literally grabbed sound effects of wolves and put it through a program that told me the pitches that the wolf sounds make and combined that into my orchestral piece," says Procunier..

She calls the project "100 per cent Canadian" in its portrayal of animals collaborating with each other.

"We are very diverse and all work together, and I think this film is a very good representation of our personalities."

More arty parties

For more, watch the CBC New Year's Eve special with Heather Hiscox on Dec 31, 7 to 9 p.m. ET.

The complete list of Canada 150 activities is available on the government's web site.

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Carrie Fisher and mom Debbie Reynolds to be buried together

vendredi 30 décembre 2016

Debbie Reynolds' son said Friday his mother and sister, actress Carrie Fisher, will have a joint funeral and will be buried together.

Todd Fisher said the actresses will be interred at Forest Lawn-Hollywood Hills, the final resting place of numerous celebrities, including Lucille Ball, Dick Van Patten, Liberace, Florence Henderson, David Carradine and Bette Davis.

The son said no date for the funeral has been set, but it will be private. A public memorial is being contemplated, but no plans have been finalized.

Earlier Friday, the Los Angeles coroner's office released Carrie Fisher's body to her family. Chief of Operations Brian Elias says an examination of Fisher was done, but he stopped short of calling it an autopsy and would not provide any details on what tests were carried out.

Elias said there was no timetable for an official determination on what killed Fisher.

Todd Fisher said the family wasn't clear on what coroner's officials had done during the examination, but was glad his sister's body had been released to Forest Lawn. "My mother and my sister are together right now," he said.

PEOPLE-FISHER/

Fans of Carrie Fisher have created a memorial for the late actress along the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles, Calif. (Phil McCarten/Reuters)

'She just left to be with Carrie'

Carrie Fisher, 60, an actress and writer who starred as Princess Leia in the Star Wars film franchise, died Tuesday after suffering a medical emergency Dec. 23 aboard a flight from London. Reynolds, 84, an Oscar-nominated actress who shot to fame after starring in Singin' in the Rain' at age 19, died Wednesday after being briefly hospitalized.

"She said, 'I want to be with Carrie,"' Todd Fisher, told The Associated Press. "And then she was gone."

In an ABC News interview that was to air Friday, Todd Fisher said that his mother joined his sister in death because Reynolds "didn't want to leave Carrie and did not want her to be alone."

"She didn't die of a broken heart," Fisher said in the 20/20 interview. "She just left to be with Carrie."

Reynolds wasn't inconsolable over her daughter's death, he said, and instead simply expressed love for her.

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Carrie Fisher and mom Debbie Reynolds to be buried together

Bill Cosby, a year later: Will he seek deal or prepare for trial?

Bill Cosby is starting 2017 in a legal dragnet that has only tightened around him since his stunning arrest a year ago.

Cosby was charged with aggravated sexual assault on Dec. 30, 2015, just days before the 12-year statute of limitations would have run out over a 2004 encounter at his estate near Philadelphia.

A year later, it's increasingly unlikely that he can avoid a felony trial slated for June. The judge has denied nearly each defense motion as the two sides fight over Cosby's deposition, other accusers and the decade-long delay in filing charges.

"It doesn't sound like the prosecutors are inclined to give him a deal that will matter," said Loyola Law School professor Laurie Levenson, who is not involved in the case. "It's an elderly man, and any (jail sentence) is probably, in his mind, worth fighting."

A recent tabloid news report suggested a plea could be in the works, but Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin Steele's spokeswoman calls the report unfounded. Still, some celebrity lawyers don't rule it out.

"Ultimately, I think they work something out. Unfortunately, I don't think it's the deal he wants," said Los Angeles lawyer Mark Geragos, who represented Michael Jackson on child molestation charges. "If they can work out a felony with minimal time, I think he'd be wise to take it, given his age and infirmities."

On Friday, his attorneys filed a motion seeking to move the trial or bring in a jury from elsewhere, arguing there's been widespread negative news coverage that would make juror bias inevitable.

Bill Cosby

Cosby's lawyer Angela Agrus speaks with members of the media after a pretrial hearing. Cosby's lawyers said he has been the target of an 'inflammatory and prejudicial smear campaign' and branded a monster, a sociopath and a sexual predator in news accounts. (oe Elmer/Bucks County Courier Times via AP)

Cosby's lawyers said he has been the target of an "inflammatory and prejudicial smear campaign" and branded a monster, a sociopath and a sexual predator in news accounts.

A spokeswoman for the district attorney's office said Steele has previously told the judge and Cosby's lawyers he does not oppose the request.

Cosby, 79 and legally blind, had appeared shaken last year as he manoeuvred past the cameras that mobbed him outside the small court office where he posted $1 million bail after his arrest. But he now appears more comfortable in court after a half-dozen or so hearings.

He quipped "Don't Tase me, bro" to security guards wanding visitors at the Montgomery County Courthouse this month; shouted out answers to questions meant for lawyers at the latest pretrial hearing; and drifted into a comedic riff as he and a handler left the ceremonial courtroom where the case is being heard to accommodate the media.

Bill Cosby

Bill Cosby, right, laughs as he exits the elevator as he returns to court for a pretrial hearing on Dec. 13. (David Maialetti/The Philadelphia Inquirer via AP)

Yet inside the room, it's been rough going for "the Cos," long beloved for his portrayal of family man Cliff Huxtable on the top-ranked 1980s sitcom The Cosby Show. The aging comedian is accused of sexually assaulting Andrea Constand, a basketball team manager he knew through Temple University, where he was a trustee and high-profile booster.

Common Pleas Judge Steven O'Neill has said the jury can hear the damaging deposition he gave in her 2005 lawsuit, when Cosby acknowledged a long list of affairs and hookups with young women during his 52-year marriage. He also testified to giving at least one woman quaaludes before sex and giving others, including Constand, pills and wine.

Scores of women now say they were drugged and molested. Steele wants 13 of them to testify at trial.

O'Neill heard two days of arguments on the issue this month. Steele called Cosby a lifelong sexual predator with a signature style. The defense questioned the women's memories and motivations as they sought to keep them from testifying as "prior bad act" witnesses.

"It's hard to know what the (plea) deal would be if the prosecution wins on the prior bad act motion," Levenson said. "Although it's not impossible, because the prosecutors also have to see and calculate how well their witnesses will hold up."

Andrea Constand

Cosby is accused of sexually assaulting Andrea Constand, a basketball team manager he knew through Temple University, where he was a trustee and high-profile booster (Marta Iwanek/The Canadian Press)

O'Neill has knocked down repeated defense efforts to dismiss the case over the delay or over what the defense calls a promise from a former prosecutor that Cosby would never be charged.

Steele's office reopened the case after Cosby's deposition became public last year. O'Neill has also appeared cool at times to Cosby's revolving team of lawyers from Los Angeles. His lead criminal lawyer remains local Philadelphia standout Brian McMonagle, who has a warm, easygoing style that engages jurors but who can also turn up the heat, as he did this month when he sparred with Steele over naming the other accusers in open court.

Once O'Neill decides if they can testify, the defense will start prepping for trial in earnest. McMonagle did not return calls seeking comment Thursday.

"You get ready to cross-examine the key witnesses in the case, unless you think some kind of deal can be worked out," Levenson said.

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Did Debbie Reynolds die of broken heart syndrome?

Dying of a broken heart is real.

When Debbie Reynolds passed away this week, her son said the stress of his sister Carrie Fisher's death the day before was too much for his mother to take.

The emotional distress of losing a loved one can trigger broken-heart syndrome, a recognized medical condition that disproportionately affects women and can be fatal.

"A 'broken heart' really is an event where the heart ceases to function normally and is prone to heart rhythm abnormalities," said Dr. Mark Creager, director of the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Heart and Vascular Center in New Hampshire and past president of the American Heart Association.

"That term is used to explain a very real phenomenon that does occur in patients who have been exposed to sudden emotional stress or extremely devastating circumstances."

Known medically as stress-induced cardiomyopathy or takotsubo syndrome, it can strike anyone, even those in good health with no previous heart problems.

Reynolds, who suffered two strokes in 2015 but recovered, was taken by ambulance to a hospital the day after Fisher died.

"She said, `I want to be with Carrie,"' Reynolds' son, Todd Fisher, told The Associated Press. "And then she was gone."

No cause of death has been disclosed for either woman.

Often confused with heart attacks

Broken-heart syndrome is when a surge of stress hormones, such as adrenaline and cortisol, cause arteries to seize, limiting blood flow to the heart. The experience — and diagnosis — is often confused with heart attack, Creager said.

Both conditions look the same on an electrocardiogram, said cardiologist Dr. Holly Andersen, director of education for the heart institute at New York Presbyterian Hospital and scientific adviser for the Women's Heart Alliance. But where heart attacks are caused by blocked arteries, there are no such blockages in "broken" hearts.

The condition can be treated, and even heal untreated, she said, but it can also cause heart arrhythmias and sudden death.

531206753TM00134_21st_Annua

Reynolds appears with her granddaughter (and Fisher's daughter) Billie Lourd at the Screen Actors Guild Awards in 2015. (Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

Japanese researchers were the first to describe broken-heart syndrome in 1990. They named it takotsubo, which means "octopus pot," for the way the malfunctioning heart appears in imaging studies.

Andersen has not treated Reynolds, but she suspects the actress succumbed to "a cardiovascular event," noting Reynolds' history of stroke and the prevalence of heart disease among women.

"It wouldn't be surprising that an 84-year-old woman like Debbie Reynolds had some (arterial) plaque, and with this kind of stress, became more vulnerable and had more of a garden-variety heart attack and sudden death," Andersen said. "But you don't have to have any predisposing disease and you could be still susceptible to sudden death from (takotsubo) syndrome because of overwhelming emotional stress."

'Too many women die of heart disease'

Barbra Streisand, an advocate for women's cardiovascular health, said in a statement Thursday that "too many women die of heart disease and stroke like mother and child Debbie Reynolds and Carrie Fisher."

Streisand gave $10 million US in 2012 to create her namesake Women's Heart Center at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, a research and treatment facility. Heart disease is the No. 1 killer of women, but until recently, research has been done almost exclusively on men.

Women's hearts are smaller and beat faster at rest than men's, Andersen said: "There's no question that, physiologically, when you put everything together — the nerves and the blood vessels — that (women's) hearts work differently and get disease differently."

"We need to study more women," she said. "We're under-researched. We're under-treated. But even if you control for all the differences that we know about, we're still more likely to die from heart disease than a man."

Carrie Fisher reportedly suffered a heart attack aboard a flight that led to her death four days later.

Women also get other forms of heart disease more frequently than men, Creager said. Takotsubo syndrome is one example.

The American Heart Association is working with Streisand's heart center to study women, heart attacks and heart disease, he said.

Scientists don't know exactly why takotsubo syndrome primarily affects women, but they think it has something to do with the female stress response and the way women's brains and bodies process emotions.

If fans of Debbie Reynolds and Carrie Fisher want to take a health lesson from the women's tragic, successive deaths, Creager and Andersen hope it will be recognized as the literal vulnerability of women's hearts. Forty per cent of women don't experience chest pain during a heart attack, Andersen said, and a recent survey showed that women often neglect to call 911 even when they think they are having a heart attack.

"The majority know that something's wrong," Andersen said. "Jaw pain, back pain, sweating, an overwhelming sense of fatigue. There's a feeling that something's wrong. It could be shortness of breath or crazy indigestion. But we'd much rather be taking care of acid reflux or indigestion in the emergency room than missing a heart attack, so please come in if you think something's wrong.

"You really can die of a broken heart."

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Did Debbie Reynolds die of broken heart syndrome?

Barbara Tarbuck of General Hospital dead at 74

Barbara Tarbuck, a stage and screen actress who played Jane Jacks on General Hospital and Mother Superior Claudia on American Horror Story: Asylum, has died. She was 74.

Tarbuck died Monday at her Los Angeles home, said her daughter, producer Jennifer Lane Connolly. Tarbuck suffered from Creutzfeldt-Jakob disorder, a rare, degenerative brain disease, Connolly said Thursday.

Tarbuck was especially proud of her regional and New York theatre work, her daughter said, including a role in the original 1980s Broadway production of Neil Simon's Brighton Beach Memoirs. Other stage credits included Harold Pinter's Landscape and Silence.

Tarbuck's films included Big Trouble (1986) from director John Cassavetes; Curly Sue (1991); and Walking Tall (2004).

Besides her work on General Hospital over more than a decade, she appeared in dozens of prime-time series including DallasCagney & LaceyThe Golden Girls, and Mad Men.

Tarbuck, a Detroit native, earned degrees from Wayne State University and the University of Michigan before studying at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art on a Fulbright Scholarship, her daughter said.

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Royal B.C. Museum calls on Indigenous people to submit stories about relics

An Indigenous artist and writer says First Nations artifacts in museums are not simply cold, hard objects, but are rather the belongings of families and communities.

The Royal B.C. Museum in Victoria has brought in Francine Cunningham as the guest editor for the spring issue of its digital magazine Curious, which will focus on Indigenous peoples' relationship to the museum's collections.

The issue will feature essays, articles, creative writing, images, video and sound submitted by Indigenous people about their perspective on the relics kept at the museum, whether the items should be there, and how they feel visiting the space.

"I really want the point of view of people who maybe feel excluded from the museum setting or feel like they haven't been welcomed before," Cunningham said.

For some, visiting the museum and reflecting on the collections can be a challenging experience, she said, because it serves as a reminder of historic policies that banned First Nations' traditions and stripped them of their belongings.

Cunningham said it can be very upsetting "when you can walk into the museum space and you see something from your family, and you know maybe it shouldn't be there."

'A multitude of perspectives'

Museums also artificially preserve some relics, such as totem poles, that weren't traditionally expected to survive the passing of time, she said.

"When they were carved and when they were raised, they were meant to eventually disintegrate and fall back into the earth."

David Alexander, the museum's head of archives, access and digital, said this edition of Curious comes at time when the museum is starting up a First Nations department and has been working toward repatriating items to Aboriginal communities.

Collections and archives are often put together by people who are not from the community where the items originate from, he said. This issue of the magazine is an opportunity to change that by having Indigenous people discuss the relics from their communities.

"I think it's important for us as the provincial museum and archives to make sure our collection ... always has a multitude of perspectives," Alexander said.

Many collections viewable online

Cunningham is encouraging First Nations youth to contribute to the magazine and use it as an opportunity to discover belongings from their communities for the first time.

She plans on holding public workshops for youth at the museum where they will look through collections and then turn what they find into stories for the magazine.

Not everyone can physically visit the museum, but many collections, archives and research have been digitized and can be accessed by the public online.

Whether it is a perspective of discovery or one of alienation or pain, Cunningham said she wants to include a diverse range of ideas through the submissions that will be featured in the magazine.

Cunningham said she will offer support to everyone, regardless of their experience in writing or visual storytelling, in putting together a submission by the deadline of Jan. 15.

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Run-DMC sues Wal-Mart, Amazon for $50M US

The rap group Run-DMC filed a $50 million US lawsuit in New York accusing Wal-Mart, Amazon, Jet and other retailers of selling products that traded on the group's name without permission.

A founder of the group and owner of the Run-DMC brand, Darryl "DMC" McDaniels, was listed as the plaintiff in the lawsuit, which was filed Thursday in the Southern District of New York.

The complaint said the defendants are "advertising, selling, manufacturing, promoting and distributing multiple products" in the group's trademarked name. The products include glasses, hats, t-shirts, patches, wallets and other items.

The lawsuit alleged that the retailers have improperly profited, diluted and harmed the Run-DMC brand, which it said has generated more than $100 million in revenue since its inception in the 1980s.

Run-DMC was founded in New York in 1981 by McDaniels, Joseph "Run" Simmons, Darryl "DMC" and Jason "Jam Master Jay" Mizell, who was fatally shot in his Queens recording studio in 2002. McDaniels and Simmons later announced that the group was officially disbanding.

The group's hits include King of Rock, It's Tricky, and Can You Rock It Like This.

In 2009, Run-DMC was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, becoming only the second rap act to be awarded that honour.

Amazon and Wal-Mart, which also owns Jet, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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Run-DMC sues Wal-Mart, Amazon for $50M US