Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Dr Who story writer confirmed

Eoin Colfer The first author of the new Doctor Who short stories has been confirmed as Eoin Colfer.

Best known for writing the Artemis Fowl series of books, Colfer's new "eshort" will feature the very first Doctor, who was played by William Hartnell from 1963 to 1966.

The story will be available to buy on 23 January and other children's authors will be writing stories in 2013.

Colfer's tale will be set in London in 1900 and deal with a "missing hand".

The blurb reads: "The First Doctor is missing his hand and his granddaughter, Susan.

"Faced with the search for Susan, a strange beam of soporific light, and a host of marauding Soul Pirates, the Doctor is promised a dangerous journey into a land he may never forge."

The author adds: "As a boy I had been reading the Doctor Who books for years before I ever saw a single episode and I found that the on-screen version of the First Doctor was almost identical to the version in my imagination."

Eoin Colfer has also written novels for adults and his latest book W.A.R.P.: The Reluctant Assassin is the first in a major new time travel series, due in April.

Doctor Who is celebrating its 50th anniversary in 2013.

In addition to the monthly stories, television specials are also planned to mark the event.


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Guitarist 'embarrassed' by appeal

7 January 2013 Last updated at 22:33 GMT By Ian Youngs Entertainment reporter, BBC News Vini Reilly of The Durutti Column in 2004 Vini Reilly played guitar on Morrissey's 1988 debut solo album Viva Hate Influential guitarist Vini Reilly of the band The Durutti Column has spoken of his "embarrassment and humiliation" after fans sent £4,000 to help him pay his rent after he had three strokes.

Reilly's band were among the first signings to Tony Wilson's Factory Records in Manchester in the 1970s.

The musician's nephew had put an appeal on the band's website saying Reilly had hit "a rough patch money-wise".

Reilly thanked the fans but said he was uneasy about accepting the money.

The Durutti Column were formed in 1978 and were managed by Wilson, who would go on to sign bands including Joy Division and Happy Mondays to his then fledgling Factory label.

The band released their first album The Return of the Durutti Colum in 1980 with a sleeve made from sandpaper.

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I'm in serious financial trouble simply because the benefit system took 18 months to process since being declared disabled”

End Quote Vini Reilly When Wilson - who also co-owned the legendary Hacienda club in Manchester - died in 2007 after suffering from cancer, Reilly described him as a "father figure".

The guitarist, who has also worked with Morrissey and whose delicate style is said to have influenced artists from Brian Eno to The Red Hot Chili Peppers, had two minor strokes in 2010.

A third stroke followed in 2011, leaving him unable to play guitar, and he faced being evicted from his house after running up a debt of £1,200 in rent while waiting to be accepted for benefits.

"One of my nephews decided that he would do something," Reilly said. "I was too ill to really care about anything anyway.

"When I found out that people were sending money to help me, I went through a mixture of absolute total embarrassment and humiliation because I've never had to borrow before.

"This was money coming from people I don't know. They just seem to like my music."

He said he did not know what would happen to the money but has asked his nephew Matt to stop accepting personal donations "because in my opinion it's an abuse of privilege".

"What about the thousands of people who are in the same situation and they don't have people supporting them?" he added.

The 59-year-old, who does not have internet access or a television at his home, said he did not understand the payment system used by his nephew and was not sure whether the donations had yet been processed.

"I'm not very easy with taking money from people, unless this money has been paid, in which case what I'll do is I'll make a special album somehow and send it to the people that have donated money because they have to have something in return," he pledged.

"I don't really know what to do to be honest. I'm in serious financial trouble simply because the benefit system took 18 months to process since being declared disabled, having no income of any kind."

Despite his unease at accepting the donations, Reilly said he was heartened by the response from so many fans.

"My feeling of just being made to feel like people care, that's worth more than any amount of money," he said.

"There's no image, there's no promotion, there's just the music, that's all there is, and they're just doing it because they're decent people and lovely people all over the place and that makes me feel very cared for."

Reilly blamed his predicament on the benefits system, saying authorities claimed to have lost three copies of the same form despite the fact that they had been signed for.

"It was a big thick form, maybe 30 pages, which was filled in with great difficulty because I can barely write, I can't hold a pen properly," he said.

The application process "was made harder and harder, with more and more rigorous tests to see if I was faking it or not", he said, adding: "I wish I was faking it."

A spokesperson for the Department for Work and Pensions was not available for comment.

Reilly's nephew Matt said he had been in "constant contact" with his uncle and that the donations had been used to pay off his rent and other outstanding bills.

'Frustrating'

"This idea came from The Durutti Column fans - amazing people that they are," Matt Reilly later wrote on the band website.

"This was not my idea, or me doing something without Vini's knowledge or consent. And Vini was hugely grateful that his fans had chosen to react in this way - he was incredibly humbled by the positive help that was being offered."

Reilly's drummer and manager Bruce Mitchell said a number of albums would be re-released this year in an attempt to generate royalties. But his medical condition means Reilly is not able to play guitar well enough to record new music or play gigs.

Asked about his guitar playing, Reilly replied: "It sounds like an eight-year-old boy having his first guitar lesson.

"It's very frustrating because I've got all this music banging around in my head. I know how I would play it. It's all complete, it's in my head, but I can't play."

Update: This story has been updated to include later comments from Matt Reilly saying he did not make the appeal without his uncle's knowledge.


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VIDEO: Tomlinson on the Royle Family

7 January 2013 Last updated at 13:38 GMT Help

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Depardieu fails to attend court

8 January 2013 Last updated at 09:19 GMT Sepp Blatter and Gerard Depardieu on the red carpet at the Ballon d'Or awards ceremony (7 January 2013) On the eve of his court date, Mr Depardieu joined Fifa boss Sepp Blatter at the Ballon d'Or football awards ceremony in Zurich Gerard Depardieu has stayed away from a Paris court where he faces a drink-driving charge, days after taking Russian citizenship in a tax row.

The actor pleaded guilty earlier to riding a scooter while three times over the alcohol limit in November.

Last month, Depardieu announced his decision to move to Belgium to avoid a new French top tax rate of 75%.

The film star received his Russian passport at the weekend but retains his French citizenship.

On the eve of the court hearing, Depardieu was in Switzerland for the annual Ballon D'Or football award ceremony.

The BBC's Paris correspondent, Christian Fraser, notes that the actor's failure to appear before magistrates could mean the case being referred to a criminal court, which tends to be less lenient.

Wine

The charge of drink-driving carries a maximum fine of 4,500 euros (£3,660; $5,880) and a sentence of up to two years in prison, along with six penalty points.

On 29 November, he lost control of his scooter in Paris and crashed. A breathalyser test showed he had a blood alcohol rate of 1.8g per litre, more than three times the French legal limit of 0.5g.

Depardieu, who owns several vineyards, once admitted to drinking up to six bottles of wine a day.

Depardieu's tax row with the French authorities began last year after President Francois Hollande said he would raise taxes to 75% for those earning more than 1m euros (£817,400).

Gerard Depardieu shows his passport after arriving in Moscow The actor says he remains French despite receiving a Russian passport

The film star, renowned for his roles in Cyrano de Bergerac and more recently as Obelix, announced in early December that he would move to Belgium, accusing France's Socialist government of punishing "success, creation and talent".

French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault branded his decision to move abroad as "shabby and unpatriotic".

The actor has developed close ties with Russia and during his visit at the weekend hugged President Vladimir Putin, who described him as a friend.

Russia has offered him a flat tax rate of 13% if he stays in the country for more than half the year. On his trip to Russia he travelled to the central region of Mordovia, which has invited him to make his home there.

Mordovia is best known for its Stalin-era gulag prison camps.

French taxman

But the actor said on Monday he was not turning his back on his country.

"I have a Russian passport, but I remain French and I will probably have dual Belgian nationality," he told French sports channel L'Equipe 21.

Under France's civil code, dual citizenship is permitted but it is unlawful to be stateless. A person must obtain another nationality before giving up French citizenship.

Depardieu also rejected claims that his decision to move abroad was to avoid paying taxes. "If I'd wanted to escape the taxman, as the French press say, I would have done it a long time ago."

He made the remarks in Zurich where he was attending the Ballon d'Or ceremony in the company of Fifa boss Sepp Blatter.


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Pupils compete in learning poetry

8 January 2013 Last updated at 09:58 GMT By Sean Coughlan BBC News education correspondent Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey Poets' Corner, Westminster Abbey: Pupils are being encouraged to memorise verse An online anthology representing eight centuries of poetry in English has been published - to be used as part of a National Poetry Competition for secondary school pupils.

The competition invites teenagers in England to memorise and recite poems from the anthology.

It wants to rekindle the idea of pupils learning poetry by heart.

Education Secretary Michael Gove praised the "richness and diversity" of the competition's poetry collection.

The anthology, selected by former poet laureate Sir Andrew Motion and poet Jean Sprackland, runs from the medieval Gawain poet through to Jacob Sam-La Rose, born in 1976 and described on the website as a "cultural architect".

Making the cut

Such anthologies are always examined for who is included and who is left behind.

WB Yeats at the BBC in 1937 WB Yeats, among the poets included in the anthology, performing his work at the BBC in 1937

And this official competition selection takes in literary giants such as Chaucer, Shakespeare, Blake, Wordsworth, Shelley and Hardy.

Among the post-1914 poets, it includes the likes of Yeats, Eliot, Lowell, Auden, Betjeman, Thomas and Heaney.

There are notable numbers of women in the collection. Philip Sidney doesn't make it, but his sister Mary Sidney Herbert is included. There is no AE Housman but there is Anna Wickham.

Among the 18th Century writers, there is no Oliver Goldsmith but Joanna Baillie gets a place.

The four younger poets included - under the age of 40 - are Vahni Capildeo, Choman Hardi, Jacob Polley and Jacob Sam-La Rose.

The competition for 14 to 18-year-olds, with funding from the Department for Education, wants to bring back the custom of pupils memorising and reciting poems.

It also wants to use such public reading of poetry as a way of building teenagers' self-confidence.

Pupils will be judged on how accurately they remember poems and how well they perform them to an audience.

Dylan Thomas, 1948 Dylan Thomas broadcasting his poems in 1948

There will be regional rounds before a national final in April.

The anthology, published at the beginning of the new school term, was chosen for work that could be read aloud, said Sir Andrew.

"We preferred poems that make a powerful impact when they are heard aloud - not because they are theatrical, but because they dramatise experiences that surprise us into a new apprehension of ourselves and our capacity for imagining, thinking and marvelling."

Mr Gove said the project would ensure that more children would be captivated by great poetry and it would help "pass our cultural legacy on to the next generation".


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Montreux festival founder in coma

7 January 2013 Last updated at 14:50 GMT Claude Nobs Nobs is still the creative director of the festival Claude Nobs, who founded the world-renowned Montreux Jazz Festival, is in a coma following a skiing accident.

The 76-year-old "fell while practising cross-country skiing" during the Christmas holidays, said a statement on the festival's official website.

He had surgery in Lausanne, Switzerland, but remains unconscious, the statement continued.

The festival, which takes place on the shores of Lake Geneva, has featured the likes of Miles Davis and Santana.

It was co-founded by Nobs and Atlantic Records president Nesuhi Ertegun in 1967, who booked Charles Lloyd and Keith Jarrett as the first headliners.

Joan Baez arrived on horseback for her debut performance in 1973, while Prince played two jazz-tinged sets to close the 2009 festival.

Nobs even earned himself a mention, as "funky Claude", in Deep Purple's song Smoke On The Water. The song is about a fire that burned down the Montreux Casino, where the festival was held, during a Frank Zappa concert in 1971.

Organisers stressed that Nobs's absence would not impact this year's event, which runs 5 - 20 July.

Their statement ended: "The entire team of the Montreux Jazz Festival wishes a full recovery to its boss."


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Pamela Anderson first out of DoI

Pamela Anderson and Matt Evers Pamela Anderson is the first celebrity to be voted off Dancing on Ice after suffering a wardrobe malfunction in the "safety skate".

The actress lost out to TV presenter Keith Chegwin after having problems with her costume.

"I just stumbled, my dress...my boobs fell out, it happens," she later said.

Despite coming third after the judges' scores, once the public vote was taken into account she and partner Matt Evers found themselves in the bottom two.

A unanimous vote from the judges sent home the former Baywatch star and Playboy model.

Pamela Anderson, 45, went on Twitter after the show to apologise to her fans.

"Thanks for everything. Sorry I was voted off... My dress fell apart in save-me skate. Devestated [sic].

"Sorry international calls were not excepted [sic]. I couldn't vote with my own phone."

Final 'guaranteed'

When she came off the ice, presenter Phillip Schofield joked: "If it had happened a little earlier this evening you'd have been guaranteed a place in the final."

Coronation Street actress Samia Ghadie, Matt Lapinskas who played Anthony Moon in EastEnders, Olympic medal-winning gymnast Beth Tweddle and former X Factor winner Shayne Ward all made it through to the next round of the competition.

Keith Chegwin was back in the new series a year after he had to quit the show when he fell and broke his shoulder and ribs.

The other six contestants including Lauren Goodger from The Only Way Is Essex, Olympic boxing gold medallist Luke Campbell and television presenter Anthea Turner, will all perform for the first time next weekend.

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