Sunday, March 9, 2025
Home Blog Page 1068

Selena Gomez ‘shines’ in Oscar-tipped musical

0
Selena Gomez ‘shines’ in Oscar-tipped musical


grey placeholderGetty Images Zoe Saldaña, Selena Gomez, Karla Sofía Gascón and Adriana Paz attend the "Emilia Perez" Headline Gala during the 68th BFI London Film Festival at The Royal Festival Hall on October 11, 2024 in London, EnglandGetty Images

The four stars of Emilia Pérez jointly won best actress when the film premiered at Cannes in May

When Emilia Pérez premiered earlier this year, it became one of the breakout hits of the Cannes Film Festival, where its four lead stars jointly won best actress.

On Wednesday, the Spanish-language musical is released worldwide on Netflix as the film awards race continues to heat up ahead of the Oscars in March.

Selena Gomez, Zoe Saldaña, Karla Sofía Gascón and Adriana Paz launched the movie at the London Film Festival last month, where it continued to build its momentum.

Emilia Pérez follows a dangerous Mexican Cartel leader (played by Gascón), who asks a high-powered lawyer named Rita (Saldaña) to help him fake his own death.

But the reason he wants to retire and disappear from the world of crime isn’t what you might expect – the drug baron wants to change gender and live a new life as a woman.

The rest of the film focuses on four women, including the newly-transitioned Emilia Pérez, as they each pursue their own version of happiness in modern-day Mexico.

Pérez is portrayed by Spanish trans actress Gascón, who has been tipped as a possible best actress contender in the forthcoming awards race.

grey placeholderNetflix Karla Sofía Gascón as Emilia Pérez and Adriana Paz as Epifanía in Emilia Pérez.Netflix

Karla Sofía Gascón (left) plays the former drug lord who transitioned to being a woman

French director Jacques Audiard came up with the idea for the film after reading a chapter in Boris Razon’s 2018 novel Écoute about a drug lord who changes identity.

Audiard went one step further for the film, and made it a story of changing gender.

“I was less interested in a change of identity to evade competitor drug barons, and more interested in the change of identity for the sake of the person she was and is,” the director tells BBC News. “I was more interested in the past and what led to that transition.”

The role required someone very specific – a trans actress, who was a Spanish speaker, who could also sing and dance.

Recalling the casting process, Gascón explains: “I was contacted when I was in Mexico by a production team, and was told ‘We need an actress as crazy as you – you’re the only one who can do this role, but you need to learn five songs for tomorrow!’

“And I was like ‘OK, let’s record the whole album and we’ll go on tour as soon as you want!’” she jokes. “But I did say, ‘this is going to be difficult, I’m not a singer’. But the team in the film, they worked with me incredibly, they really helped me with all the songs and made it so that we could do the best work possible.”

Asked about Gascón’s casting, Audiard adds simply: “Without her, there would be no film.”

grey placeholderGetty Images Karla Sofía Gascón attends the "Emilia Perez" Headline Gala during the 68th BFI London Film Festival at The Royal Festival Hall on October 11, 2024 in London, EnglandGetty Images

Karla Sofía Gascón plays the titular character in Emilia Pérez – a drug baron who changes gender

Interestingly, Gascón campaigned to play both the male and female roles – in other words, the character both before and after transition.

Audiard had originally intended for a different actor to play the male drug lord Manitas, because, the director explains, he was “uncomfortable asking [Gascón] to revisit something she was moving away from”.

But, Gascón recalled: “I said to Jacques, I want to play this role in the complete arc, because for me it is important to do the full part. It wouldn’t be the same film if another actor played [Manitas].”

That meant using effects and make-up such as a fake beard, so she could play the drug baron in the first section of the musical.

“This film is this film because the same actress played the complete performance,” Gascón continues. “It’s that kind of role you have once in your life and I didn’t want to lose the opportunity to play this.”

The ongoing debate about whether actors should have lived experience of characters they play is complex, and Gascón herself says: “I prefer that all actors have the full opportunities. When you chose this career, it’s because you want to express another life that’s not like your life.

“But,” she continues, “obviously when you are closer to the role of the character, it’s better. In this case, I think it’s beautiful, because I give all of myself to this role.”

Gascón has been described as a “wonderful discovery” by the Hollywood Reporter’s David Rooney, who said she gives “a magnificent performance”.

“The warmth, the joyous self-realisation, the complexity and authenticity… that illuminate her characterisation no doubt owe much to the parallels in the Spanish star’s life – in her own words, she was an actor before becoming an actress, a father before becoming a mother.”

grey placeholderGetty Images  Selena Gomez attends the "Emilia Perez" Headline Gala during the 68th BFI London Film Festival at The Royal Festival Hall on October 11, 2024 in London, EnglandGetty Images

Selena Gomez was previously Emmy-nominated for her performance in TV series Only Murders In The Building

Gomez plays the drug lord’s wife, who is kept in the dark about her former lover’s new identity, while Paz portrays Emilia’s new romantic interest after transitioning.

Reviews of Emilia Pérez, which is released on Netflix next month, have been generally positive so far.

“It’s a wild, gritty, glitter-soaked ride that defies convention and classification,” said Entertainment Weekly’s Maureen Lee Lenker.

She praised the film’s performances, commenting: “Selena Gomez is a welcome surprise, shedding any remaining hints of her Disney Channel origins in her portrayal of a hard-loving wife of a narco.

“The film’s climax in particular allows Gomez to shine as a dramatic actress in new ways. She conveys heartache and anguish through a tortured physicality that propels her into the unpredictable state of a woman on the verge of something dangerous.”

Asked by the BBC’s Graham Norton if it was comfortable going back to the world of singing and dancing for the musical, Gomez said: “No, because this was completely different.

“It was intricate dance moves I never knew my body could do, and it was also me playing a character so if anything I tried to avoid what I was comfortable with.”

grey placeholderGetty Images US actor Zoe Saldaña poses on the red carpet upon arrival to attend the Gala screening of "Emilia Perez" at the Royal Festival Hall, during the 2024 BFI London Film Festival in London, on October 11, 2024.Getty Images

US actress Zoe Saldaña has previously appeared in Avatar and Guardians of the Galaxy

grey placeholderGetty Images Adriana Paz attends the "Emilia Perez" Headline Gala during the 68th BFI London Film Festival at The Royal Festival Hall on October 11, 2024 in London, EnglandGetty Images

Mexican actress Adriana Paz plays the love interest of the newly transitioned Emilia

The Telegraph’s Tim Robey described the film as “amazingly confident – it’s clever, earnest, ridiculous, knowing, forceful and absolutely bonkers”, while Hoai-Tran Bui of Inverse said it was “an emotionally fulfilling triumph”.

Not all critics were as enthusiastic about the film, however.

“Emilia Pérez was originally intended to be an opera, which perhaps partly explains its saccharine sentimentality, repetitive lyrics, and diverging story branches. But that doesn’t excuse its almost random, whiplash-inducing tonal pivots,” said Slant’s Kyle Turner.

However, Lauren Bradshaw of Fangirl Freakout said: “Emilia Pérez is a magnificent, genre-bending thrill ride that transcends the typical movie construct, breathing a fresh burst of excitement into the way we think about film.”

grey placeholderGetty Images French film director Jacques Audiard poses on the red carpet upon arrival to attend the Gala screening of "Emilia Perez" at the Royal Festival Hall, during the 2024 BFI London Film Festival in London, on October 11, 2024Getty Images

The movie musical is directed by French filmmaker Jacques Audiard

grey placeholderNetflix Selena Gomez as Jessi in Emilia PérezNetflix

Selena Gomez plays the drug lord’s wife, who is kept in the dark about his change of identity

As an actress, Gomez is best known for starring in Only Murders in the Building, but also has a successful singing career with hits including Back To You, Wolves and Love You Like a Love Song.

Her co-star Saldaña, meanwhile, has starred in a large number of blockbusters in the last two decades, with roles in the Avatar and Guardians of the Galaxy franchises.

It remains to be seen whether Emilia Pérez could be a big awards player, but Academy voters may see an opportunity to recognise Saldaña’s box office success via this more critically acclaimed work.

Their co-star Adriana Paz is a Mexican actress whose credits include Not Forgotten, Hilda and La Caridad, while Gascón also had a successful acting career before transitioning in 2018.

grey placeholderNetflix Zoe Saldana as Rita Moro Castro in Emilia PerezNetflix

Zoe Saldaña has previously starred in the Avengers and Avatar franchises

Emilia Pérez has already been selected as France’s entry for the best international feature category at the Oscars, which take place in March.

But despite the film’s awards traction, Paz tells BBC News: “I never think about that, really. I get into a project because I’m interested in the topic, character, director or actors, you do it because it really matters to you.”

She adds that the attention in recent months is unlike anything she’s experienced in her career. “It’s been a lot,” she says, “because I’ve been working in Spain and have a long career in Mexico, and people have a recognition of my work, but not like [it’s been] since Cannes.

“In my country they feel very proud of me, and there was a lot of people that didn’t know about my work, and now thanks to Emilia they are getting to know my work… and they see ‘we feel so proud as Mexicans that you won this award.'”

After the success of Emilia Perez, Paz says she would “love to” appear in more musicals in future, and loves singing.

But Gascón has a slightly different take. “I don’t like musicals!” she laughs, adding that she hopes casting directors aren’t too enthusiastic about her performance.

“I don’t like to sing, I don’t want to be compared to Shakira or something like that, and I don’t like dancing, so please don’t call me!”



Source link

Paula Radcliffe beaten by Haile Gebrselassie in half marathon

0
Paula Radcliffe beaten by Haile Gebrselassie in half marathon


She said the illness had been a factor in her slow time, but feels she should still have run far quicker.

“I know that racing on antibiotics isn’t the best idea, and that is why I did not expect fireworks coming in,” she added.

“The format of the race meant that I could not stop, even though I felt really bad, so I tried to just keep going. I tried to zone out and just get through it. That it was I did, and I feel a bit shaky now.

“The thing that worries me is that I did not feel myself out there while running. The danger is that it affects my confidence [for the London Olympics].”

However, the 38-year-old insists that she is entirely focused on the Games, and will use the races between now and August to rebuild her morale.

“I am not giving up on it by any means,” she said.

“I think I need to get out and race and feel like myself. The 10kms that I race, and if I do race a half marathon, are a build up for the [Olympic marathon].

“They are not races for running as fast as I can in their own right. But I still want to go out and feel strong and feel good.”



Source link

Rising NHS physician associate use questioned after Oldham death

0
Rising NHS physician associate use questioned after Oldham death


grey placeholderBBC/Brijesh Patel Roy Pollitt, wearing a green and white patterned shirt and dark jacket, is photographed in a park.BBC/Brijesh Patel

Roy Pollitt thought his late wife was being treated by a doctor rather than a physician associate

A man whose wife died after a drain was mistakenly left in her abdomen for 21 hours has condemned the increased use of physician associates (PAs) within the National Health Service.

Susan Pollitt’s inquest concluded her death at Royal Oldham Hospital in July 2023 had been caused by an “unnecessary medical procedure contributed to by neglect”.

Roy Pollitt did not know his 77-year-old wife was being treated by a PA – who are only required to have two years’ medical training – and believes “she would have lived if the NHS had not used cheap labour”.

The coroner who examined Mrs Pollitt’s death highlighted the lack of a national framework covering PAs’ training, supervision and competency assessment.

‘At risk’

Associates were introduced in the NHS 21 years ago with the expectation they would support doctors by delivering basic care.

Over the past two years the number of associates has more than doubled to 3,000.

According to the NHS Long Term Plan, there will be 12,000 physician and anaesthetic associates by 2036.

Health Secretary Wes Streeting said there were “legitimate concerns” about the role of PAs before the expansion.

Fears have been expressed that some have been acting beyond their original remit.

BBC News has seen evidence that in the month of Mrs Pollitt’s death, the NHS trust which oversees Royal Oldham used PAs to cover nearly 20% of doctor shifts in elderly care.

Several organisations, including the British Medical Association (BMA), have voiced concerns about the blurring of professional lines between doctors and associates across NHS trusts and primary care.

Anaesthetists United, a group set up by concerned doctors and consultants, has filed a legal claim against the General Medical Council (GMC) for not, in its view, properly defining associates’ roles and responsibilities.

One of the group’s founders, consultant anaesthetist Richard Marks, said patients were “being put at risk” as a consequence, something that “strikes to the heart of you” as a doctor.

BBC News has also learned that PAs have exceeded their remit in several NHS trusts, including by:

  • Covering doctors’ shifts
  • Prescribing medicines
  • Ordering X-rays without supervision

From December, associates will join doctors in being regulated by the GMC.

Significant concerns remain, however, from some within the medical profession.

grey placeholderFamily photograph Roy and Susan Pollit pose for a photograph together. Roy wears a formal black suit with a black bow-tie and a pink flower in his button hole. Susan  wears a white fascinator and a light grey outfit.Family photograph

Roy and Susan Pollitt were married for 58 years until her death in July 2023

Susan Pollitt originally went to Royal Oldham Hospital with a broken arm after suffering a fall at her home in nearby Failsworth, Greater Manchester.

Initially treated in a corridor, the great-grandmother was also diagnosed with an acute kidney injury.

Due to a lack of gastroenterology beds, she was taken to a respiratory ward.

Her daughter Kate Pollitt said staffing levels seemed “very low”, adding that on the night her mother died “it took nearly four hours to find a doctor in the whole of the hospital”.

At Mrs Pollitt’s inquest, dozens of issues with her care came to light.

Not only did the PA leave an abdominal drain – used to remove excess fluid from her body – in for 15 hours longer than permitted, but he also told colleagues to clamp it, increasing the risk of infection.

It has also emerged that, in the previous year, a liver nurse only approved the associate’s competence in using the equipment because she assumed he was a doctor.

Kate Pollitt said: “He thought he was doing right… but he was in a situation where he wasn’t supported.

“There was too much confusion and not enough supervision.”

grey placeholderBBC/Brijesh Patel Kate Pollitt, with brown, swept back hair and wearing glasses, is photographed in a park. She wears a light green jacket and an open white shirt.BBC/Brijesh Patel

Kate Pollitt was keen to stress she does not blame the PA who cared for her late mother

The Northern Care Alliance (NCA) NHS Foundation Trust, which runs the Royal Oldham, found Mrs Pollitt would probably have survived had the drain been removed earlier.

Its chief medical officer, Dr Rafik Bedair, said: “We’re saddened Mrs Pollitt didn’t receive the standard of care that she should have done and we remain deeply sorry to her family for this.”

He said the trust owed it to them to “learn from what went wrong and make things safer for patients in the future”.

The NCA serves more than a million people across Salford, Oldham, Rochdale and Bury, as well as providing more specialist services to patients from Greater Manchester and beyond.

Following Mrs Pollitt’s inquest, North Manchester Coroner Joanne Kearsley issued a Prevention of Future Deaths notice due to her concerns about PAs.

The GMC agreed patient safety was at risk without effective safeguards.

Its chief executive and registrar, Charlie Massey, said next month’s regulatory changes would be “a vital step towards strengthening both patient safety and public trust in these professions”.

And he stressed it was down to employers to clearly define roles and, like “all regulated professionals, [associates] will be expected to work within their competence”.

grey placeholderBBC/Adam Walker Consultant anaesthetist Richard Marks is photographed in a hospital environment, wearing his dark blue scrubs and pale blue surgeon's cap.BBC/Adam Walker

Consultant anaesthetist Richard Marks thinks patients are put at risk by PAs not being supervised effectively

But consultant anaesthetist Dr Marks warned the lack of a national scope of practice – with clear limits and standards – would still put patients at risk.

He said a lack of supervision for PAs had been a “key feature” in recent high-profile cases, including the death of 30-year-old woman from Salford.

“In each one of them, had a doctor been more closely involved and seen what was going on, they would have made changes to that patient’s care,” he said.

“What we’re most concerned about is that you’ve got a big increase in numbers of PAs who don’t have the depth of understanding because of their background, and who are going to be let loose on the public without adequate supervision.”

Mr Marks was also worried about the fact that while doctors receive seven years of training, PAs receive two.

“What you don’t know, you don’t know,” he said, with PAs “not having the skills or experience” to diagnose patients with varying levels of complexity.

The Academy of Royal Colleges has also called for an independent review into the use of associates because of an “increasingly acrimonious and destructive debate”.

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: “Our deepest sympathies are with Susan’s family and friends.

“Patient safety is our top priority. We are urgently working with the NHS to ensure that physician associates are supporting, not replacing, doctors.”

NHS England said it had issued “updated guidance on the appropriate deployment of medical associates” and would provide increased clarity about their roles.

Streeting told BBC Breakfast he felt PAs “do have a role to play” in freeing up doctors’ time, but he had concerns about transparency.

But the health secretary said patients “should know who we’re seeing, who’s in front of us and why, and we’ve got to take those issues seriously”.

The Pollitts stressed they did not want to blame the PA for what happened, saying he had been the “only one who showed Susan – and us – any empathy”.

Kate Pollitt said she only wished he had received more supervision.

“You do get angry and upset,” she said. “But there’s nothing we can do for my mum now, so there’s no point in being angry and having that bitterness for the rest of our lives.

“We just want change – it won’t mean things like this won’t ever happen again but if we can help reduce the chances then it’s worth it.”



Source link

League tables to reveal failing NHS trusts

0
League tables to reveal failing NHS trusts


grey placeholderPA An NHS hsopital worker, wearing a surgical mask and scrubs, walks down a busy hospital corridoor PA

Failing hospitals will be revealed in league tables and NHS managers sacked if they do not turn things around, the health secretary will tell health leaders at a conference in Liverpool.

Wes Streeting is promising a “no-holds-barred, sweeping review” of NHS performance in England.

Hospitals can expect to be ranked on indicators such as care delivery and finances, so patients can see whether they are receiving a good service.

And “turnaround teams” will be sent into struggling trusts, while top performers will have more freedom over spending.

grey placeholderReuters Wes Streeting standing in front of a building, looking directly into cameraReuters

Meanwhile, senior leaders will be denied pay rises if key improvements are not made.

A new pay framework for chief executives will be published in April, which will “clamp down” on poor performance while rewarding success.

Streeting will tell the NHS Providers conference there will be “no more turning a blind eye” to failure – something he has promised before, along with the idea of league tables.

“We will drive the health service to improve, so patients get more out of it for what taxpayers put in,” he will say.

“Our health service must attract top talent, be far more transparent to the public who pay for it, and run as efficiently as global businesses.”

‘Deep dives’

The Department of Health and Social Care says, currently, there is little incentive for trusts to run budget surpluses, from which they are unable to benefit – but that will now change.

Top performers will be given more capital and greater control over where to invest it – be that new equipment or technology or modernising their buildings.

The NHS Oversight Framework, which sets out how trusts and integrated care boards are best monitored, will be updated to ensure performance is properly scrutinised.

And at poorly performing trusts, government and NHS England “deep dives” will identify the most pressing issues and how they can be resolved.

NHS trusts could also be banned from using expensive agency staffing to cover certain rota gaps.

Some recruitment agencies have charged up to £2,000 for a single nursing shift -and last year, temporary workers cost the NHS in England £3bn, the government says.

‘Cut waiting’

NHS chief executive Amanda Pritchard welcomed the accountability, saying: “The extensive package of reforms, developed together with government, will empower all leaders working in the NHS – and it will give them the tools they need to provide the best possible services for our patients.”

But Patients Association chief executive Rachel Power warned the new measures must bring positive change.

“We hope trusts who receive greater funding freedom will use this money wisely – to cut waiting times, make the waiting experience better for patients, and strengthen the ways they work with patients to improve services,” she said.

“These are the things that matter most to people using the NHS.”

‘Challenging circumstances’

Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, which represents NHS trusts, said health services were already subject a lot of oversight and regulation – and the prospect of “more league tables” would concern health leaders.

“NHS staff are doing their very best for patients, under very challenging circumstances, and we do not want them feeling like they are being named and shamed,” he said.

“League tables in themselves do not lead to improvement.”

Mr Taylor said the “devil will be in the detail around what constitutes failure”, much of which could be beyond a health leader’s immediate control.

“We look forward to working with the government to make sure that any new measures don’t disincentivise managers from taking on roles in struggling organisations,” he said.

NHS Providers, which represents NHS trusts in England, said hospitals were already doing everything possible to boost productivity while delivering tough efficiency measures.



Source link

Band Aid recordings combined to mark charity single’s 40th birthday

0
Band Aid recordings combined to mark charity single’s 40th birthday


grey placeholderGetty Images Harry Styles accepts Album Of The Year for Harry's House onstage during the 65th Grammy Awards in Los Angeles. He is smiling and is wearing a cream suit jacket with black velvet lapels.Getty Images

Harry Styles, pictured last year, featured on the 2014 recording of Do They Know It’s Christmas?

Harry Styles, George Michael, Sinead O’Connor and Ed Sheeran are among the stars whose vocals will feature in a new “ultimate mix” of Band Aid’s Do They Know It’s Christmas?

The song will feature on a forthcoming compilation marking 40 years since the original charity single was released, organisers Bob Geldof, Midge Ure and Trevor Horn said.

The original single by the charity supergroup was released in 1984 to raise money for anti-famine efforts in Ethiopia.

Since then, the song has been re-recorded three times to mark the fifth, 20th and 30th anniversaries, with some of the most popular artists from each era taking part.

For the new remixed version of Do They Know It’s Christmas, producer Horn went back to the original recordings and blended the voices from the different generations into one whole.

grey placeholderReuters Rita Ora hosts the 2024 MTV Europe Music Awards at Manchester Co-op Live in Manchester earlier this month. She is singing into the microphone and has long blonde hair worn down. She is wearing a black boob tube and silver jewellery.Reuters

Rita Ora, pictured at the MTV EMAs at the weekend, sang on the 2014 recording

The resulting version features vocals from Sting, Ed Sheeran, Boy George, Sugababes, Sam Smith, Bono and Chris Martin.

Vocals previously recorded by George Michael, who died in 2016, and Sinead O’Connor, who died in 2023, will also feature.

The line-up is rounded off by Harry Styles, Rita Ora, Guy Garvey, Seal, Robbie Williams, Kool and the Gang and Underworld.

The vocalists will sing to the music played by a band including Sir Paul McCartney, Phil Collins, Roger Taylor, Thom Yorke, Paul Weller, Damon Albarn, Johnny Greenwood, Gary Kemp and Justin Hawkins.

The new “ultimate mix” will premiere on British radio stations on the morning of 25 November 2024, the 40th anniversary of the original song being recorded.

It will then be available to stream and buy on digital platforms, ahead of the full compilation album’s release on 29 November.

A new video by Oliver Murray, who created the video for The Beatles’ 2023 single Now And Then, will accompany the song, featuring archive footage of David Bowie introducing the song’s stars and Michael Buerk’s famous BBC news report on the song.

grey placeholderGeorge Michael on the Parkinson chat show in 2004. He is wearing a black jacket and is smiling.

The voices of George Michael (pictured), who died in 2016, and Sinead O’Connor, who died last year, will feature on the new single

grey placeholderBrian Aris/Band Aid Group shot of Band Aid 1984Brian Aris/Band Aid

The original Band Aid single was released in 1984 and raised around £8m

The project was founded by Geldof and Ure in 1984, and the original single sold more than two million copies, and raised around £8m.

All versions of the song reached number one in the UK singles chart.

A 1985 concert, Live Aid, and another in 2005, Live 8, saw many of the artists and bands join forces to continue raising money for the project.

In the last four decades, it’s thought the Band Aid Charitable Trust has raised more than £140m in total.

The money has gone towards long-term development projects and emergency aid. The 2014 version, for example, raised money for the Ebola crisis.

However, later versions of Do They Know It’s Christmas? received criticism, as some listeners suggested the lyrics were increasingly outdated and patronising.

Some artists such as Adele were reported to have chosen to donate to charity instead of taking part.

The decision to combine previously recorded versions of the single cleverly sidesteps similar risks, while still raising money and marking the charity’s 40th anniversary.



Source link