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France: Power outage hits Cannes region during film fest – DW – 05/24/2025

France: Power outage hits Cannes region during film fest – DW – 05/24/2025

DW24-05-2025

As the Cannes Film Festival is set to end, a power outage hit the glitzy resort town on the French Riviera. Police assume it was caused by a deliberate fire.
A major power outage hit the area around the French Riviera resort of Cannes on Saturday, the final day of the Cannes Film Festival.
The power cut began just after 10:00 a.m. local time (8:00 a.m. GMT) due to a fire in a substation in the nearby village of Tanneron. Police assume the cause was probably an arson attack.
However, the police spokeswoman was unable to say whether there was a connection between the incident and the film festival.
A blackout caused the timetable screens at Cannes train station to go offline Image: Sameer Al-Doumy/AFP
The French media reported that a pylon also fell onto a high-voltage power line in the morning. It is not yet clear whether the incident had a criminal background.
According to grid operator RTE, the power outage affected 160,000 homes in Cannes and the surrounding area.
The glitzy holiday destination has been hit by a power outage, causing traffic lights to fail and leading to traffic jams. The shops were closed on one of the main streets.
Teams from RTE and supplier Enedis are working to restore the network. It is still unclear when the power will be back on, French media reported, citing RTE.
Cannes Film Festival 2025 kicks off
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Festival is not affected by outage
The Cannes Film Festival organizers said the closing ceremony would not be affected by the power outage.
The festival announced it had "switched to an alternative electricity power supply, which enables us to maintain the events and screenings planned for today in normal conditions, including the closing ceremony."
However, morning screenings at the festival's cinemas were briefly interrupted while the supply switched to generators.
At the closing ceremony, scheduled to start at 16:40 GMT, French actress Juliette Binoche and her jury will announce the winners of the festival's top prizes. Twenty-two films are competing for the Palme d'Or this year.
Edited by: Wesley Dockery

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Berlin pays tribute to Christo's iconic 'Wrapped Reichstag' – DW – 06/06/2025
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Berlin pays tribute to Christo's iconic 'Wrapped Reichstag' – DW – 06/06/2025

Thirty years ago, Germany's parliament building "disappeared" under silver fabric for two weeks. The work of art by Christo and Jeanne-Claude is now celebrated with a light installation. Anyone who was in Berlin in the summer of 1995 will probably remember it for the rest of their lives: how the Reichstag — the seat of the German parliament — disappeared. Not blown up, not demolished, but completely wrapped in silver fabric and tied up with thick ropes, almost like a gift. A crazy idea? Perhaps. But also one that made history. Behind this spectacular action was a pair of artists who have repeatedly surprised the world with their ephemeral mega works of art: Christo and Jeanne-Claude. Their vision of a wrapped Reichstag was big, bold — and took 23 years to plan. 2025: A special anniversary year 2025 is a real anniversary year for fans of Christo and Jeanne-Claude. Not only is Berlin marking the 30th anniversary of the "Wrapped Reichstag" with a light installation projected onto the west façade of the Reichstag building from June 9 to 22, but other cities around the world are also paying tribute to the couple's works: Paris commemorates the wrapping of its Pont Neuf that happened 40 years ago, while New York marked the 20th anniversary of "The Gates," an installation in Central Park featuring thousands of gates on which fabric panels fluttered. And above all, both artists would have turned 90 this year: They were born on the same day, on June 13, 1935. Christo was born in Bulgaria and later fled from the communist East to Western Europe, first to Prague, then to Vienna, Geneva and finally Paris. There he met Jeanne-Claude in 1958 — she was French with roots in Morocco. The two became an unbeatable team. Christo was the artist, Jeanne-Claude the organizer — whereby both saw themselves as equal partners and later officially signed all projects together. After 23 years of planning, Christo and Jeanne-Claude's dream became a reality Image: 1995 Christo and Jeanne-Claude Foundation, Photo: Wolfgang Volz Their specialty was huge, spectacular art installations in public spaces. They wrapped bridges, buildings or entire coastal strips, stretched gigantic curtains through valleys or erected kilometer-long fabric installations. None of it permanent, all self-financed, without advertisers or sponsors; the money for the projects was only generated through the sale of drawings, collages and designs. 'Wrapped Reichstag': A long wait for approval The idea of wrapping the Reichstag in Berlin was born back in 1971 — in the middle of the Cold War. At the time, the Reichstag stood right next to the Berlin Wall. It was a symbolic building, but was not actually used. The seat of government of the then Federal Republic of Germany was still in Bonn, and the Bundestag (the German parliament) only moved into the Reichstag building with its characteristic glass dome, remodeled by architect Norman Foster, in 1999. In 1978, Christo presented the model of the wrapped Reichstag at an exhibition in Zurich Image: Niklaus Stauss/akg/picture-alliance Christo and Jeanne-Claude were nevertheless fascinated by the building's symbolism and historical role. Time and again, this place has been the scene of significant moments in Germany's history, during the German Empire, the Weimar Republic, the Nazis' "Third Reich" and the Second World War, the division of Germany after the war and its eventual reunification. Christo and Jeanne-Claude wanted to make this building visible again by concealing it for a brief period. But a work of art like this required permission — and that took a long time coming. 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'My Greatest Dream' - Taylor Swift Buys Back Rights To Old Music
'My Greatest Dream' - Taylor Swift Buys Back Rights To Old Music

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'My Greatest Dream' - Taylor Swift Buys Back Rights To Old Music

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