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AUKUS review: Ex-UK defence minister weighs in

AUKUS review: Ex-UK defence minister weighs in

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Shock news INXS received just before historic 1991 Wembley gig
Shock news INXS received just before historic 1991 Wembley gig

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Shock news INXS received just before historic 1991 Wembley gig

Just before INXS walked onstage to play a career-defining gig at London's famous Wembley Stadium, the six musicians were given shocking news by manager Chris Murphy. The band's shrewd dealmaker had blown almost every cent of their 1.4 million pounds box office takings for the huge show in front of 74,000 fans on July 13, 1991; that's worth roughly $AU7 million in 2025. 'F**k! What am I in this business for? We're getting paid 1.4 million pounds for this gig tonight (and) I'm getting five grand. Five f**king grand. That'll pay my f**king champagne bill at the hotel,' frontman Michael Hutchence cheekily shared down the barrel of one of the many cameras shadowing the band backstage. Murphy spent the band's pay cheque on those cameras, having enlisted renowned British film-maker David Mallet to capture INXS at the pinnacle of their live powers. Mallet was one of the hottest music video and concert film directors of the era with credits including David Bowie's classic music videos Ashes to Ashes and Let's Dance, AC/DC's Thunderstruck and Queen's I Want To Break Free. All the sexy swagger and pulsating energy of that electrifying performance was preserved on the Live Baby Live concert film which has now been reimagined as INXS Live At Wembley, a behind-the-scenes look at the gig screening on Seven. Jon Farriss and Kirk Pengilly recall that this gig was a triumphant middle finger to the notorious British music media who had brutally dismissed INXS - as they did every Australian band of the era - until they exploded onto the UK charts with the X album in 1990, the wake of their 1987 global smash Kick. Five years before their mammoth Wembley gig, INXS had opened for Queen at the iconic venue and were pelted with bread and tomatoes. Who takes bread and tomatoes to a concert? So the success of INXS, off the back of the hit single Suicide Blonde, was entirely fan-led. 'That tall poppy thing, I think we were one of the first bands to experience it on that level,' Farriss said. 'We taught ourselves to stay quiet about it, we just wouldn't talk about it.' The critics may have hated them but the fans and their celebrity peers adored Hutchence, Jon, Andrew and Tim Farriss, Garry Gary Beers and Pengilly. The guest list for the Wembley gig was between 2,000 and 3,000 people depending on who you ask. Both Kylie Minogue and Helena Christensen, Hutchence's ex and next girlfriends, were backstage. So was Rolling Stones' then bassist Bill Wyman and members of Duran Duran. 'Yeah, I heard it was over 2,000, closer to 3,000 people,' Pengilly said. 'Apparently it was insane. I didn't know any of them. But, you know, it was London, (therefore), it was celebrities.' Jon added: 'I was like Andrew, I was just hiding in the dressing room.' One of the enduring myths about the Wembley gig is that Hutchence gave his friends - and a couple of band members - pills not of the prescription variety, with the instruction to take them on 'the fourth song' during the set which was The Stairs. 'It was the times,' Pengilly said diplomatically while confirming the myth but preferring not to name names. Mood enhancers aside, the gig is a tour de force for the band. Watching it now, as more than 70,000 people bounce up and down in unison to New Sensation, reminds you why it remains one of the most powerful live music moments ever captured on film. 'What was beautiful about it is that it wasn't us going, 'Come on, everybody'. It just sort of happened,' Jon said. 'The whole thing was trippy and it was extremely emotional. It's hard to understand what a strange psychological transition it is leading up to the moment you walk on stage to then being on stage.' INXS got their flowers recently when Never Tear Us Apart was he shock No.1 on the inaugural Triple J Hottest 100 Australian Songs of all time. 'Oh man, that was wow,' Farriss said. 'I was genuinely just speechless. 'It absolutely floored me and from that moment on when it was announced, I've never received so many texts and so many warm wishes and just beautiful messages from people I haven't spoken to or thought of for years and years and it's sort of brought us all back together. 'It's been amazing.'

20th Anniversary Collection: The comic genius of Jennifer Saunders
20th Anniversary Collection: The comic genius of Jennifer Saunders

ABC News

time13 hours ago

  • ABC News

20th Anniversary Collection: The comic genius of Jennifer Saunders

Jennifer Saunders says everything that's happened in her career has been the result of a happy accident, rather than any careful planning. When she and her great pal Dawn French were making their first series, French & Saunders, they were given complete freedom by the BBC, including the freedom to fail. Despite a few mishaps along the way and a battle with breast cancer, Jennifer now says that early freedom, risk-taking and random opportunities were the best things that could possibly have happened to them. Further information First broadcast in April, 2014. You can hear Sarah's full conversation with Timothy Spall on the ABC Listen App, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also read all about the Conversations origin story on the ABC News website.

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